The Federal Government's abandonment of climate policy cowardly - Turnbull

Friday, 28 May 2010

The Australian
Source: AAP

Former Liberal leader Malcolm Turnbull admits the Coalition has only a "theoretical'" chance of meeting its emission reduction targets by 2020.

But that's still better than the Government, who had nothing but a "great, big, yawning chasm in its climate change policy suite".

Mr Turnbull, who was dumped as leader last year so the party could withdraw its support for emissions trading, said the Coalition now had the better climate change credentials.

Smart city still on the cards, says Penny Wong

Tuesday, 25 May 2010

The Australian
By: Fran Foo

Federal Climate Change Minister Penny Wong has scoffed at suggestions the federal government's multi-million-dollar smart-city, smart-grid trial had been cancelled despite missing a critical deadline.

The government had committed up to $100 million to the project to establish a large-scale smart-grid and smart-meters pilot aimed at demonstrating best practise, shape government policy and help industry and consumers realise the benefits of smart grids.

Power shift

Thursday, 20 May 2010

The Australian
By: Giles Parkinson

The clean energy debate

The Rudd government's emissions trading scheme may have been deferred and international negotiations on climate change treaties may have stalled, but the global transition to a low-carbon economy is actually accelerating.

The shift is being driven as much by the need for energy security and the chance to win a share of the growing market for clean technology as by the desire to curb greenhouse gas emissions.

Talk of environment, not the town

Friday, 21 May 2010

The Australian
By: Drew Warne-Smith

It was not a deep love of nature that drew Bill McKibben to the environmental cause so much as his love of a good story.

Raised in a Boston suburb, on the east coast of the US, McKibben made his name writing the Talk of the Town column in The New Yorker magazine.

"It was about as urban an occupation as you could get," McKibben, 49, says with a laugh.

Ocean fish could disappear in 40 years

Tuesday, 18 May 2010

The Courier-Mail
From: Correspondents in New York

The world faces the nightmare possibility of fishless oceans by 2050 unless fishing fleets are slashed and stocks allowed to recover, UN experts warned.

"If the various estimates we have received... come true, then we are in the situation where 40 years down the line we, effectively, are out of fish," Pavan Sukhdev, head of the UN Environment Program's green economy initiative, said.

First BioBanking land purchase to go ahead - report

Monday, 17 May 2010

Herald Sun
From: AAP

Developers will be able to bulldoze environmentally sensitive land in Sydney if they pay to protect equivalent land elsewhere, under a scheme that puts a dollar value on animals and plants.

NSW Environment Minister Frank Sartor will today announce the first of the state's highly controversial "BioBank" sites with the government purchase of 80 hectares of grassland near Camden as a permanent conservation reserve, the Sydney Morning Herald says.

There's lots of ways to join green revolution

Friday, 14 May 2010

Northern Territory News

It seems everybody is talking about going green these days. Whether you turn on the TV, flip open a magazine or eavesdrop at your local cafe, everyone seems to be in on the green revolution.

There are so many different ways to incorporate environmentally friendly practices into your family's daily life. Whether you turn off the tap while brushing your teeth, recycle used bottles and boxes or jump on your bike instead of driving, all of these little steps can make a difference.

Delay for new emissions rules

Friday, 14 May 2010

The Australian
By: Sid Maher

The deadline for tougher emissions standards for cars is likely to be put back after Australian vehicle manufacturers warned they would struggle with the massive investments required to meet the new rules and some imports could be forced off the market.

The Rudd government has planned to start phasing in Euro 5 emissions standards from 2012 and even tougher Euro 6 standards from 2016.

The car industry has opposed the move, arguing that Australian fuel standards are not high enough to support the new emissions regulations.

Chief scientist backs climate action

Friday, 7 May 2010

Herald Sun
Source: AAP

Australia's chief scientist Professor Penny Sackett has backed a group of eminent international scientists calling for urgent action on climate change.

Professor Sackett said governments everywhere needed to show more leadership on climate change action.

"Even if each one of us on the face of the earth stopped emitting greenhouse gases tomorrow, not another ounce into the atmosphere, the temperature would still rise," she told ABC radio today.

Sydney Embraces Tri-Gen

Monday, 10 May 2010

The Australian
By: Giles Parkinson

The City of Sydney this month begins the process of taking energy generation back to its origins as it sends out final tender documents for a network of tri-generation plants that will reduce the need for council buildings to rely on coal-fired power generation and could, ultimately, take the entire CBD off grid.

Relief, anger over ETS

Wednesday, 28 April 2010

The Herald Sun
By: Olga Galacho

Climate change
Scheme delay buys time but renewable sector deems it 'insanity'

The emissions trading scheme has been put on ice for at least 30 months as the Federal Government seeks to calibrate its response to climate change with other nations.

Blaming the Coalition's opposition to the Carbon Pollution Reduction Scheme and the "slow progress'' on global action, Prime Minister Kevin Rudd yesterday said legislation to curb Australia's emissions would be delayed until the end of 2012.

Rudd's Dangerous Climate Retreat

Wednesday, 28 April 2010

The Australian
By: Paul Kelly, Editor-at-large

The PM lacks the conviction to keep his emissions trading promise

As retreats go, they come no bigger than Kevin Rudd's delaying of his once cherished emissions trading scheme -- one of the most spectacular backdowns by a prime minister in decades.

If you want an equivalent, think of Gough Whitlam delaying Medibank, Paul Keating deferring the float, Bob Hawke folding on the abolition of the tariff or John Howard surrendering on his GST.

Power from the people

Friday, 30 April 2010

The Herald Sun
Source: AAP

Australia has its first hydro-electric plant powered by human waste.

The Sydney harbourside plant, which generates energy by dropping treated waste water down a 60m shaft, was switched on yesterday.

The plant at North Head will reduce carbon dioxide emission equivalent to taking 3000 cars off the road, NSW Water Minister Phil Costa said.

Centre hopes to tame power hungry internet

Wednesday, 28 April 2010

The Australian
By: Mitchell Bingemann

Alcatel-Lucent, the University of Melbourne and the Victorian government have established a new research centre to investigate how to build energy efficient telecomunications networks.

The new centre, which has been dubbed the Centre for Energy-Efficient Telecommunications (CEET), will be jointly operated by Alcatel- Lucent's research arm Bell Labs and the University of Melbourne.

100 Power Saving Ideas from The Daily Telegraph

Saturday, 10 April 2010

Every cent counts for families faced with skyrocketing power bills, so it's vital your home runs as efficiently as possible.

Follow these 100 tips for keeping your electricity usage down.

Greens float carbon levy

Tuesday, 13 April 2010

The Advertiser
Source: AAP

The Australian Greens have started negotiations with the Government to get an interim carbon levy in place for next year.

Leader Bob Brown today wrote to Prime Minister Kevin Rudd asking him to consider the idea of the Government's climate adviser Professor Ross Garnaut, for a levy of $20 a tonne.

The revenue would be used to help reduce household, commercial, transport and industrial emissions.

The Greens want the plan put to parliament in the next three Senate sitting weeks, and propose a start date of January 1 next year.

From pocket to pans, recyclers breathe new life into old mobiles

Wednesday, 14 April 2010

news.com.au
By: Andrew Ramadge, Technology Reporter

Pots and pans, fence posts and a skerrick of precious metals - that's how your mobile phone could end up after being recycled.

Mobile phone industry recycling program MobileMuster is currently calling on "hoarders" – people who stockpile old phones – to turn their handsets in.

About one third of Australians have two or more old phones stashed away at home, according to industry research.

Picture cloudy on biofuels future: industry expectations

Friday, 16 April 2010

The Australian
By: Steve Creedy

The global financial crisis appears not to have slowed down research into biofuels but industry expectations about its growth and impact have become less certain.

Industry participants, at an environmental conference hosted by US manufacturer Boeing in Sydney this week, were split on how much of Australia's aviation fuel would come from biofuel by 2020, with some opting for less than 5 per cent and others predicting 5 to 10 per cent.

Only one person thought it would be more than 10 per cent.

Any colour so long as it's green

Friday, 16 April 2010

The Australian
By: Philip King, Motoring Editor

It's still very early days for the electric car, but as with hybrids, it's up to governments to act as testbeds for the technology and as early adopters.

Once upon a time you could tell an employee's seniority by the trim level of the large sedan - a Commodore or a Falcon - in their parking spot. Not any more.

Vehicle shapes are different and so are the brands. The work car park has changed irrevocably.

News Corp. Global Energy Initiative Newsletter

Tuesday, 13 April 2010

Learn about News Corp.'s programs and progress toward building a more durable, sustainable business and a cleaner, greener future in their Global Energy Initiative Newsletter.GEI Logo<

Red-hot issue has gone really cold

Sunday, 11 April 2010

The Sunday Telegraph
By: Simon Kearney

Practical environmental solutions must replace sledge-hammer tactics, experts warn national political editor Simon Kearney

"When I found out what was going on, it was like, oh my God I know nothing about program design,'' a public servant says, as if addressing colleagues around the water cooler.

"It's not like DCC (Department of Climate Change) has any expertise in this area. DCC is not a program manager,'' continues the public servant, obviously annoyed about a government decision.

US glaciers gone

Friday, 9 April 2010

The Herald Sun
Source: AP

A national park in the US has lost two more of its glaciers to climate change and many of the rest may be gone by decade's end.

Warmer temperatures have reduced the number of named glaciers in Montana's Glacier National Park to 25, said US Geological Survey ecologist Dan Fagre. "When we're measuring glacier margins, by the time we go home the glacier is already smaller than what we've measured,'' Mr Fagre said yesterday.

The latest two to fall below the 10ha threshold, the minimum size required for the glacier to have a name, were Miche Wabun and Shepard.

It ain’t easy been green? Think again

Saturday, 27 March 2010

Northern Territory News
Source: wire

Homeowners have been urged to take grass roots action to green their homes through a Climate Change on a Shoe String program to complement environmental programs aimed at improving sustainability in Australian homes.

Climate Change on a Shoe String was a simple combination of management and basic upgrading of fittings, many being low cost, according to Archicentre's Queensland spokesman Angus Kell.

Germany beats us for solar power

Saturday, 27 March 2010

The Advertiser
By: Cathy Alexander

Germany may be a cloudy country - but it has 50 times as much solar power as sunny Australia.

An international study on clean energy conducted by the Pew Center on Global Climate Change has found Australia is far from leading the way.

Australia is considered a good fit for solar panels because it is sunny and has long daylight hours.

Symbolic act a phenomenon

Saturday, 27 March 2010

The Courier-Mail

The phenomenon that is known as Earth Hour has gone from strength to strength since its inception in 2007.

As the world embarks on its fourth Earth Hour, it didn't take long for the number of countries and regions participating to set a new record.

More and more governments, businesses and individuals are signing up to make the pledge to show the world what can be done to fight climate change.

Last year 88 countries got involved with Earth Hour, this year at the time of printing 118 countries have signed up with the final figured expected to rise further.