Greens call for dumping of ETS - Group has new climate change plan

Friday, 12 June 2009

The Courier-Mail
By: Cathy Alexander

Green groups want emissions trading ditched in favour of direct and immediate action to tackle climate change.

Groups representing 400,000 people have put forward an alternative -- dubbed Plan B -- which includes phasing out coal-fired power stations and an overhaul of public transport.

They say the country has become obsessed with emissions trading and described the Federal Government's planned scheme as a dud.

Nuking green myths

Tuesday, 9 June 2009

The Australian
By: Barry Brook

Nuclear is the inconvenient but only solution, urges Barry Brook

If climate change is the inconvenient truth facing our fossil fuel-dependent society, then advanced nuclear power is the inconvenient solution staring right back at the environmental movement.

Ordinary people have power for change

Friday, 5 June 2009

Northern Territory News
By coordinator Environment Centre NT: Stuart Blanch

World Environment Day is two years younger than me.

The day commemorates the opening of the Stockholm Conference on the Human Environment on June 5, 1972.

Over the past four decades, the hot button environment issues may have changed -- pesticides in the 70s, rainforest logging in the 80s, to land and water management and climate change these past two decades. But the power of ordinary people to build a better future for our children and the planet is stronger than ever before.

A bright green future

Friday, 5 June 2009

The Courier-Mail
By: Graham Readfearn

Queensland's newest environmental warrior is practising what she preaches this World Environment Day, writes Graham Readfearn

"We are going to have new green-collar jobs and new industries that we have not had before''

Kate Jones, ever so slightly breathless, drops her diminutive frame on to the big brown leather couch in her even bigger ministerial office and immediately points to a half-full plastic bottle of mineral water on the coffee table.

"That's not mine,'' she says.

Green Guide 2009: Nation's message on water saving rings true

Thursday, 4 June 2009

The Advertiser
By: Frances Stewart

Saving water around the home can also save money, with many water-wise ideas paying for themselves within a few years.

Scientists predict climate change will lead to less rainfall in South Australia and it will become even more important to make the most of every drop in the future.

A dripping tap in the kitchen, laundry or bathroom can waste more than 20,000 litres of water a year, but can be easily repaired in most cases with a replacement washer, which costs a few cents from a hardware store.

Scientists unite to warn of reef threat

Tuesday, 2 June 2009

The Courier-Mail
By: Graham Readfearn

Scientists have warned that carbon dioxide being pumped into the atmosphere by burning fossil fuels was turning the oceans more acidic, with catastrophic and irreversible consequences for marine life.

CAR REVOLUTION: Obama makes green the popular colour

Sunday, 24 May 2009

The Advertiser
By: Stuart Martin, Motoring Editor

Lumbering leviathans with "Made in the U.S.A.'' stamped on compliance plates have been put on death row by President Barack Obama as he tightens up emissions and fuel-consumption standards.

The now owner of a large chunk of the country's once-dominant GM, the American President is bringing the U.S. automotive industry into the 21st century.

Garnaut tick for emission trading

Saturday, 23 May 2009

The Advertiser
By: Simon Jenkins, Canberra

Federal government climate change adviser Professor Ross Garnaut remains critical of some aspects of the proposed carbon pollution reduction scheme, but says the legislation should be passed.

Professor Garnaut has largely endorsed changes to the scheme, now the subject of a Senate inquiry.

However, he remains critical of some parts.

Little steps go a long way in fighting climate change

Wednesday, 20 May 2009

The Daily Telegraph

Natalie Isaacs was surprised how easy it was to do something to help save the planet from climate change.

But first she had to get her head around an issue that can be overwhelming even to experts.

"Until a few years ago it all seemed too hard. I wasn't connected to the problem and then I took a closer look and found you can help by changing little things in your daily life,'' the Newport businesswoman and mother of four said yesterday.

Warming to affect 'hundreds of millions'

Wednesday, 22 April 2009

The Advertiser

London: Hundreds of millions of people will become victims of climate change-related disasters over the next six years, Oxfam stated yesterday, urging governments to change the way they respond to such events.

The British-based aid and development charity estimated the number of people affected by climatic disasters would rise by 54 per cent to 375 million people a year on average by 2015, based on data on similar disasters since 1980. In a report it warned that humanitarian aid spending and the way it was allocated was far from ready to meet the challenge.

Carbon currency fuels group's green dream

Monday, 20 April 2009

The Courier-Mail
By: Graham Readfearn

When the time comes for calculating their budgets, a group of Queenslanders has introduced a currency other than the dollars in their bank accounts.

Known as the North Brisbane CRAG, the 20-strong group has created a new economy, with carbon as the only currency that matters.

CRAG stands for Carbon Reduction Action Group and it's one of the first Australian incarnations of similar groups launched in America and Britain to help combat climate change.

Take the challenge -- Changes to lifestyle

Wednesday, 1 April 2009

The Daily Telegraph
By: Neil Keene

Hunter communities are signing up to a worldwide movement aimed at tackling climate change at one of the most grassroots levels.

Newcastle became an official part of the Transition Towns project and plans are already under way for the Lake Macquarie suburb of Coal Point to join the fray.

Devised in the UK, Transition Towns recruits entire communities to cut down on pollution and fossil fuels use by embracing sustainable lifestyle changes like renewable energy and communal gardens.

Obama takes climate lead

Monday, 30 March 2009

The Australian
By: Lenore Taylor, National correspondent

US President Barack Obama plans to take a leadership role at the crucial UN climate change talks in Copenhagen later this year by calling meetings of major polluting nations, including Australia, for next month and July.

The President's involvement raises hopes a deal may be brokered despite the ravages of the global economic crisis.

How to save money and change the world

Saturday, 28 March 2009

The Courier-Mail
By: Graham Readfearn

With the double-whammy of climate change and harsh economic times, everyone is looking for ways to save money and help the environment.

Rebates are available for everything from major solar-electricity systems to simple energy-saving bulbs.

But with state and federal rebates going through changes and modifications it can be difficult to know what is available.

Here's our comprehensive guide to the eco-rebates available for Queenslanders and why they can help your pocket and your planet.

Hotter days ahead to change farming

Friday, 27 March 2009

The Australian
By: Asa Wahlquist, Rural writer

Australia is hotter than ever and is expected to get hotter, with huge consequences for the nation's farming industry.

CSIRO scientist Mark Howden has warned that changes in climate, even though only slight, meant the nation needed to re-think approaches to agriculture.

Dr Howden, from the CSIRO's Climate Adaptation Flagship, told the Greenhouse 2009 conference yesterday that agriculture practices could look quite different in future decades.

Climate's grim forecast

Thursday, 26 March 2009

The Advertiser
By: Tory Shepherd, Mark Kenn

More extremely hot days will lead to increased discomfort, sickness and death, experts say.

Findings from two separate studies into the impact of climate change on health were presented at the Greenhouse 2009 conference yesterday in Perth.

One study found climate change could double the number of deaths from heat stress in Sydney.

EPA rules carbon dioxide a danger to public health

Wednesday, 25 March 2009

The Australian
By: Ian Talley, Washington

The US Environmental Protection Agency has sent the White House a proposed finding that carbon dioxide is a danger to public health, a step that could trigger a clampdown on emissions of greenhouse gases across a wide swath of the US economy.

If approved by the White House Office of Management and Budget, the endangerment finding could clear the way for the EPA to use the Clean Air Act to control emissions of carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases believed to contribute to climate change.

Evidence of rapid climate change in polar regions

Friday, 27 February 2009

The Courier-Mail
By: Graham Readfern

One of the world's largest ever coordinated science research projects has uncovered further evidence of rapid climate change in polar regions.

Researchers found signals that ice sheets in Greenland and Antarctica were melting, raising sea levels.

Scientists from more than 60 countries took part in more than 160 projects looking at the polar regions as part of the International Polar Year - a two-year program of research.

Obama adds fuel to carbon debate

Thursday, 26 February 2009

The Australian
By: Lenore Taylor, National correspondent

International momentum towards an agreement on climate change was boosted yesterday when US President Barack Obama urged Congress to draft legislation for a cap-and-trade emissions trading system.

Australian observers said the speech had "breathed life'' into international talks for a climate change deal, even though White House officials said the US legislation might not pass Congress before negotiations in Copenhagen later this year.

Watts cheap and green thanks to new solar cells

Thursday, 26 February 2009

The Herald Sun
By: Peter Familari

New revolutionary solar panels could be just like money in the bank.

A Victorian printing firm will soon begin trials of the ultra-cheap panels made from plastic cells and printed like banknotes.

Mass production of the solar cells will be considerably cheaper than rooftop panels.

They could trim electricity costs by 95 per cent - to 50c a watt compared with $10 a watt for traditional solar cells.

The film-like cells are just the start of a revolution in plastic electronics at CSIRO's Future Manufacturing Flagship group.

Tiser among elite in fight to be green

Saturday, 21 February 2009

The Advertiser
By: Cara Jenkin, Environment Reporter

The Advertiser has joined a select group of environmentalists tackling climate change after achieving an ambitious reduction in greenhouse gas emissions.

News Limited, publisher of The Advertiser, is the first media organisation invited to join the United Nations Environment Program's Climate Neutral Network.

The network, also known as CN Net, includes 100 countries, cities, companies and organisations which have set high greenhouse gas reduction targets.

Critical view for the future

Friday, 20 February 2009

The Advertiser

A new website has been launched at www.vitalplanet.com.au that provides a platform where prominent men and women in science, government and business can present their solutions for tomorrow.

Founder Ms Cathie Agg says the new Vital Planet aims to provide easy access to the perspectives of credible leaders.

"With critical issues, such as climate change, biodiversity loss and resource depletion, it now is more important than ever that we hear solutions from leaders whose information is of the highest quality,'' she says.

EPA to act on carbon, finally

Friday, 20 February 2009

The Australian
Source: Agencies

Washington: The US Environmental Protection Agency is expected to act for the first time to regulate carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases that scientists blame for global warming.

The New York Times said the EPA decision could accelerate the progress of energy and climate change laws in the US Congress and form a basis for the US position at UN climate talks in Copenhagen in December.

Youth sign up for an extreme weather challenge

Thursday, 19 February 2009

The Courier-Mail
By: Graham Readfearn

A new generation of emergency volunteers is being trained to deal with extreme weather conditions.

Green Cross Australia has launched its Extreme Weather Heroes campaign to inspire 20,000 people under 30 to join emergency response volunteer groups.

Chief executive Mara Bun said the United Nations' Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change had predicted Australia would experience more frequent and more intense floods and fires as a result of climate change.

Warming `much more rapid' than climate panel predicted

Monday, 16 February 2009

The Australian
By: Correspondents in Chicago and Paris
Source: AFP

Dire warnings of future devastation sparked by global warming have not been dire enough, climate scientists warn.

Just over a year ago, the Nobel-winning Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change published a report warning of rising sea levels, expanding deserts, more intense storms and extinction of up to 30 per cent of plant and animal species.

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