Tuesday, 5 May 2009

A very personal reaction to Rudd's promise to deliver a more effective emissions trading scheme by deferral and tweak



Let me now go to the question of targets. On the question of targets the Australian Government remains committed to reducing carbon pollution by five per cent against 2000 levels by 2020, regardless of action taken internationally.
Secondly, we also retain our commitment to reduce emissions by up to 15 per cent of 2000 levels by 2020 in the context of a global agreement that falls short of the 450 parts per million outcome but satisfies criteria already specified in the White Paper.
Thirdly, we now commit to reduce carbon pollution by 25 per cent by 2000 levels by 2020 if the world agrees to an ambitious global deal to stabilise levels of CO2 equivalent in the atmosphere by at least 450 parts per million by 2050. This of course, 450 parts per million outcome, is an outcome consistent with Australia having the prospect of saving the Barrier Reef.
Furthermore, if this happened, that is if we did achieve that significant and ambitious and comprehensive global outcome around 450 parts per million, the Government has further committed to realising five per cent of that 25 per cent – up to five per cent of that 25 per cent – by the Government purchasing international credits including investment in the protection of international forests.


The Prime Minister's full statement on 4 May 2009

Stephen Conroy: when a name is all



If your name is Stephen Conroy these are some of your anagrams:

Yon torn speech
Censor thy peon
Thence soon pry
Try snoop hence
Thence nosy pro
Hence p0rn toys
Censor the pony
Retches on pony
Phony crone set
The p0rn coneys
Hence p0rno sty
Potency nosher
Chosen entropy

If your title is Senator Stephen Conroy this is your unfortunate fate:

A hot teensy p0rn censor
Entrenches a snoopy rot

NASA looks at Antarctic ice


Image Credit: NASA/GSFC/METI/ERSDAC/JAROS, and U.S./Japan ASTER Science Team

The Wilkins Ice Shelf, on the western side of the Antarctic Peninsula, experienced multiple disintegration events in 2008. By the beginning of 2009, a narrow ice bridge was all that remained to connect the ice shelf to ice fragments fringing nearby Charcot Island. That bridge gave way in early April 2009. Days after the ice bridge rupture, on April 12, 2009, the Advanced Spaceborne Thermal Emission and Reflection Radiometer (ASTER) on NASA's Terra satellite took this image of the southern base of the ice bridge, where it connected with the remnant ice shelf. Although the ice bridge has played a role in stabilizing the ice fragments in the region, its rupture doesn't guarantee the ice will immediately move away. [NASA Image of the Day]

*Update*

en Passant on the money


Leonie gets right to the point when faced with a piece of post-Howard revisionism:

Crap Corner - Colonel Costello (1st Howard Regiment, ret'd)

Remember Peter Costello?

He's the guy who didn't spend nearly enough on infrastructure during his 11 years as Treasurer.

He's the guy who slashed spending on hospitals and schools but had billions for defence, ASIO and other unproductive sectors of society.

He's the guy who pissed the resources boom revenue up against the tailings.

The Colonel Blimp of Australian politics put on his old battle gear this Anzac Day and went 'over the top'.

His stormed the lines of the Conservative Rudd Labour Government......