Thursday 8 December 2016
Northern Rivers Knitting Nannas visit Queensland gas field
The Clarence Valley Conservation Coalition Inc. website published this post on 30 November 2016:
Nanna Lynette's Report
I found that although I’d seen many photos and movies of gasfields and had heard people talk about them, nothing prepared me for visiting a gasfield and walking around the infrastructure and hearing the massive amount of noise. The size of the Kenya gasfield and the amount of infrastructure was mind-blowing.
The gas from the field is piped to the Kenya processing plant and after processing is piped to Gladstone. The processing plant, which covers an area of a couple of acres, consists of three massive metal structures about five storeys high. The noise coming from this was horrendous. We were standing about a kilometre away and where we were the noise was deafening.
The next part of the tour was a visit to the State Forest where some of the actual Kenya gaswells are. Initially they were about a kilometre apart but when production slowed they drilled other wells in between the existing ones so that the wells were then 500 metres apart. Each well sits in a cleared pad of at least a quarter of an acre. This means you’ve a fractured environment because the ground is bare except for some gravel over it. And each well makes a horrific noise as well.
The whole area is massively noisy and dusty because of all the clearing.
The cleared pipeline corridors are about 100 metres wide and have been taken over by weeds like fireweed. Along the main pipeline there are vents – high point vents and low point vents about 400 metres apart.
The high point vents vent raw gas 24 hours a day. Of course this smells. It just goes straight into the atmosphere. The low point vents expel moisture which is collected in troughs and presumably evaporates if it doesn’t overflow….
Read the full post here.
This is a timely reminder of what could still happen here as the Baird Government has not guaranteed the permanent gas-free status of the NSW Northern Rivers region, has reserved the right to once again issue petroleum exploration licenses [PELs] and, As part of a deal that extinguished previous applications for CSG leases, the government agreed to insert a clause in legislation giving priority to previous claimants. This was on behalf of the NSW Aboriginal Land Council, which had made four applications for gas exploration leases.
As late as March 2016 the Baird Government has been telling overseas mining interests that "The Clarence-Morton basin has very good petroleum potential……Almost all wells drilled … have yielded gas and/or oil".
Wednesday 7 December 2016
United Nations requests Governments of Sweden and United Kingdom to allow Julian Assange "freedom of movement"
U.N. Human Rights Council, Working Group on Arbitrary Detention, 30 November 2016:
The United Nations Working Group on Arbitrary Detention has concluded its 77th regular session from 21 to 25 November in Geneva.
The Working Group has a mandate to investigate allegations of individuals being deprived of their liberty in an arbitrary way or inconsistently with international human rights standards, and to recommend remedies such as release from detention and compensation, when appropriate.
During the session, the Working Group adopted 18 opinions concerning 43 persons deprived of liberty. The adopted opinions will be transmitted to the Governments concerned and the sources. These opinions will also be published on the website of the Working Group.
The UN expert group also considered four requests for review* of previous opinions, submitted by the Arab Republic of Egypt, the State of Kuwait and the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland. The Working Group concluded that the requests did not meet the threshold of a review as enshrined in paragraph 21 of its methods of work,** and that they were thus not admissible.
Excerpt from Opinion No. 54/2015 concerning Julian Assange (Sweden and the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland)*:
Disposition
In the light of the foregoing, the Working Group renders the following opinion: The deprivation of liberty of Julian Assange is arbitrary and in contravention of articles 9 and 10 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and articles 7, 9 (1), (3) and (4), 10 and 14 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights. It falls within category III of the categories applicable to the consideration of the cases submitted to the Working Group.
Consequent upon the opinion rendered, the Working Group requests the Governments of Sweden and the United Kingdom to assess the situation of Mr. Assange, to ensure his safety and physical integrity, to facilitate the exercise of his right to freedom of movement in an expedient manner and to ensure the full enjoyment of his rights guaranteed by the international norms on detention.
The Working Group considers that, taking into account all the circumstances of the case, the adequate remedy would be to ensure the right of free movement of Mr. Assange and accord him an enforceable right to compensation, in accordance with article 9 (5) of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights. [Adopted on 4 December 2015]
Labels:
human rights,
international law,
Sweden,
U.K.,
United Nations
Dutch-owned 'super' trawler "Geelong Star" has left Australian waters and will not be returning
Save Our Marine Life is celebrating the fact that the Dutch-owned factory trawler Geelong Star has left Australian waters and will not be returning.
The trawler has removed its Australian flag of convenience and been reflagged as Dutch – in the process its old name KW 172 Dirk Dirk has been re-instated.
ABC News reported on 24 November 2016 that:
The ship's departure came just before Labor and Greens members on a Senate committee recommended all mid-water trawlers be banned from fishing in Australian waters.
The committee had been investigating the environmental, social and economic impacts of super trawlers.
In 2012, ships known as super trawlers were prohibited from fishing in Australian waters, but the ban only applied to vessels over 130 metres, and not the Geelong Star, which is 95 metres.
Labor and Greens committee members also urged the Federal Government to appoint a National Recreational Fishing Council.
The report said public confidence in the management of Australia's fisheries needed to be enhanced, and it suggested the Australian Fisheries Management Authority publish information about fishing activity in the Small Pelagic Fishery regularly, such as bycatch quantities.
Liberal Senators Jonathon Duniam and David Bushby dissented from the recommendations, and said the Government was "committed to maintaining a balanced and science-based approach to all decisions regarding access to Commonwealth fisheries".
The Senate Standing Committees on Environment
and Communications report into the Environmental, social and economic
impacts of large-capacity fishing vessels commonly known as 'Supertrawlers'
operating in Australia's marine jurisdiction was published in November 2016.
The Committee
report stated:
1.46 The FV Geelong Star commenced
fishing in the SPF on 2 April 2015.40 The Geelong Star is
a 3181 tonne factory freezer vessel with a hold capacity of 1061 tonnes. At
95.18 metres, the Geelong Star is the longest fishing vessel
in the AFZ.41
1.47 The operation of the Geelong
Star in the SPF is a joint enterprise between Seafish Tasmania and
Dutch company Parlevliet & Van der Plas BV and its Australian subsidiary,
Seafish Tasmania Pelagic Pty Ltd.42 The fish caught by the Geelong
Star is shipped to export markets, usually in West Africa.43
1.48 AFMA was notified that Seafish
Tasmania had nominated the Geelong Star to fish its
concessions in the SPF on 12 February 2015. Following registration of the Geelong
Star as an Australian-flagged boat by the Australian Maritime Safety
Authority,44 AFMA confirmed that the vessel met its
requirements. The Geelong Star commenced fishing in the SPF on
2 April 2015. As the Geelong Star is less than 130 metres in
length, it is not affected by the ban introduced by the government in April
2015….
1.50 Since it commenced operating, AFMA
has initiated various regulatory measures in response to mortalities of
protected species caused by the operations of the Geelong Star.
Various stakeholders are also concerned about the effect of the trawler's
operations on other commercial fishing operations and recreational fishing
activities. Both the fishing activities of the Geelong Star and
the regulatory approach taken by AFMA have attracted controversy.
1.51 Environmental non-government
organisations expressed opposition to the activities of the Geelong
Star and the approach taken to managing the SPF. Environment Tasmania
and the Australian Marine Conservation Society both called on the government to
'enact a permanent ban on the operation of factory freezer trawlers in the
Small Pelagic Fishery'.45 The Conservation Council SA provided
a list of recommendations regarding potential localised depletion, adverse
environmental effects, how to minimise impacts on protected species and the
presence of AFMA observers on the vessel. The Conservation Council SA called
for vessels such as the Geelong Star to be banned from the
fishery 'until management strategies', including the recommendations outlined
in its submission, 'are in place to effectively minimise impacts on protected
species'.46
1.52 Recreational fishing interests are
another key stakeholder group. Submitters in this group expressed concern about
potential repercussions for the Australian recreational fishing sector from the
operations of the Geelong Star. The Australian Recreational Fishing
Foundation (ARFF) called for a moratorium on 'industry scale' fishing in areas
of the SPF that are of concern to the recreational fishing sector. The ARFF
argued that this moratorium should remain in place 'until a comprehensive
assessment has been conducted to determine whether industrial scale fishing of
the SPF is the highest and best use of the SPF, in our nation's interest and
whether the small pelagic fishery should be commercially fished at all'.47
1.53 Seafish Tasmania, the operator of
the Geelong Star, argued that the use of a factory freezer trawler
such as the Geelong Star is the only way that operations in
the SPF can be commercially viable. Seafish Tasmania also advised that, over 11
years, it has worked within the regulatory arrangements to assist in developing
management plans and strategies 'that support the sustainable management of the
SPF'.48 Seafish Tasmania added:
The current management regime in the
SPF, and in particular the conditions applied to the Geelong Star,
are extremely strict. Clearly, they are designed
to provide a high degree of public
confidence that the operations of the vessel are being closely monitored and
managed.49
1.54 Seafish Tasmania concluded:
The company has made substantial
investments in supporting scientific surveys and more recently in bringing
freezer trawlers from Europe to catch our quota and to produce high quality
fish for human consumption. It is time to let us get on with the job of
catching our quota.50
1.55 Seafish Tasmania and the Small
Pelagic Fishery Industry Association (SPFIA) also argued that the science-based
management of the fishery and the statutory fishing rights associated with the
vessel should be respected. For example, the SPFIA submitted:
The impact of the continued political
interventions in the management of the Small Pelagic Fishery is being felt well
beyond the confines of this Association. Although SPF quota holders are
effectively the primary target of the political attacks, there is widespread
erosion of industry confidence in the ability of AFMA to manage fisheries in an
independent, non-political and science based manner. Consequently, industry
confidence in the quality and security of their Statutory Fishing Rights is
being steadily undermined.
In these destabilising circumstances,
it should not be surprising if industry were to take a shorter term view of
their investments reflecting the increased political risk being faced. This is
exactly the situation that Government sought to avoid by providing the fishing
industry with well defined, long term secure fishing rights to inspire
operators to take economically responsible decisions and to look after the
marine resources on which their businesses depend.51
1.56 Other commercial fishing interests
urged the committee and other interested stakeholders to separate concerns
about factory freezer vessels operating in the SPF, where resource sharing
issues involving recreational fishers are important, and the operation of
factory freezer trawlers in other fisheries. Petuna Sealord Deepwater Fishing,
which has operated a factory freezer vessel in the blue grenadier fishery since
1988, urged the committee to separate 'what we see are two dissimilar issues',
namely concerns about 'super trawlers' in the SPF and the operation of factory
freezer trawlers elsewhere. It explained:
The current community concern which has
led to this inquiry is not necessary driven by the size or freezing capacity of
the vessel or the science of the fishery, as evidenced in the blue grenadier
fishery, but centres around resource sharing and access to a fish species that
recreational fishers consider is a significant driver in maintaining
healthy populations of key recreational species.52……..
1.62 The Geelong Star is
95 metres long and, therefore, is not covered by the 130-metre definition of
super trawler used for the ban. Nevertheless, the Geelong Star has
commonly been referred to as a super trawler, including by the media and state
governments.58 In addition, some of the concerns expressed by
groups that opposed the Margiris have similarly been applied
to the Geelong Star. Some submitters also argued that there is only
a marginal difference in the quota allocated to the Abel Tasman,
which was banned, and vessels such as the Geelong Star that
are not.59 Other submitters, however, maintain that 'there is
no correlation between vessel size and fishing power'.60
1.63 On this issue, Mr Allan Hansard,
Managing Director, Australian Recreational Fishing Foundation, commented: 'It
is not necessarily the size of the boat; it is that intensity that we need to
really focus on in this case'.61
1.64 From the perspective of the Stop
the Trawler Alliance, which is an alliance of environment, fishing and tourism
organisations established in 2012 in response to the Margiris, the
principal issue is that a factory freezer vessel is operating in the SPF, not
that a vessel of a certain size is operating.62......
The end result was this:
Recommendation 1
6.22 The committee recommends that the
Australian government ban all factory freezer mid-water trawlers from operating
in the Commonwealth Small Pelagic Fishery.
The full
report can be read here.
Because the recommendation is not yet reflected in legislation and because there is some uncertainty about the reasons the trawler vacated Australian waters as well as a fear it may eventually return, concerned people should write to Deputy Prime
Minister, Minister for Agriculture and Water Resources, Barnaby Joyce MP and Assistant
Minister for Agriculture and Water Resources, Senator Anne Ruston who have portfolio responsibility for fisheries management and to their federal MP calling on government to permanently ban all freezer mid-water trawlers from operating in Australian Small Pelagic Fisheries.
Tuesday 6 December 2016
Gawd help us! This is a National Party federal MP?
http://www.smh.com.au/federal-politics/political-news/barnaby-joyce-vows-lnp-maverick-george-christensen-will-become-a-cabinet-minister-20161130-gt12kw.html
George Robert Christensen, Nationals MP for Dawson (Qld), 38 year old, unmarried former local government councillor who entered federal parliament in 2010. Nationals Party Whip since 17 October 2013.
Well-known for uttering homophobic, islamophobic, anti-environmental protection and climate change denial statements. Can confidently be filed by thinking voters under 'right wing nut job - possibly politically dangerous'.
Australian Competition & Consumer Commission (ACCC) final decision on the proposed sale of APN News & Media regional newspapers to News Corp due on 8 December 2016
The proposed date for announcement of the Australian Competition & Consumer Commission (ACCC) final decision on the proposed sale of APN News & Media regional newspapers to News Corp is 8 December 2016.
Consideration of the sale is occurring against this backdrop………
Financial Review, 8 November 2016:
News Corporation will rip $40 million in costs out of its Australian publishing arm in 2016-17, some of which will come from job cuts, as the Rupert Murdoch-controlled company deals with falling advertising revenue and a shift to digital.
Advertising revenue at News Corp Australia fell 11 per cent in local currency in the first quarter, which was relatively similar to the same period last year, News Corp chief financial officer Bedi Singh told investors on Tuesday morning during the company's financial results call.
Circulation revenue increased on a local and reported currency basis. News Corp reports in US dollars.
"While we continue to benefit from the cost-reduction program that News Australia announced in the second half of fiscal 2016, which totalled around 5 per cent of the cost base, we are now embarking on further cost initiatives," Mr Singh said.
"We expect an additional Australian dollar $40 million in cost savings this fiscal year while we continue to push digital initiatives more broadly."
It is understood that these costs will come across the local business and will include redundancies. News Corp's Australian publications include The Australian, The Daily Telegraph and The Herald Sun. News Corp shares finished Tuesday 1.3 per cent higher at $16.11 in local trade.
It comes as News Corp has begun offering redundancies at The Wall Street Journal and is planning for $US100 million ($130 million) in annual savings by the end of 2017-18.
Proprint, 24 November 2016:
Less than two weeks after it announced a company-wide cost slashing strategy, News Corp Australia has started canvassing the idea of voluntary redundancies to its staff, encouraging those interested to put their hands up before its redundancy programme begins.
Industry union Media Entertainment and Arts Alliance (MEAA) says it is aware News Corp management had begun gauging staff interest in redundancies.
The inevitable job cuts are a by-product of News Corp’s slowing advertising revenue, which forced the publishing giant to push its $40m cost saving strategy to staff.
In a response to News Corp’s redundancy agenda, the MEAA says it has rallied behind affected editorial staff, and had previously made an effort to ensure forced redundancies are not on the cards.
“MEAA has called on News Corp Australia to confirm that there will be no forced redundancies as part of its latest round of cost savings measures. It is particularly frustrating that the announcement of the redundancies came within hours of voting opening for a new enterprise bargaining agreement negotiated between News Corp and MEAA members over many months – with the company’s management never once indicating that further job losses and cost savings measures were imminent,” the MEAA states.
The Australian, 12 September 2016:
News Corp’s planned acquisition of APN News & Media’s Australian Regional Media newspaper business will result in up to 300 job losses as back office synergies are sought to secure the future of quality journalism in the affected regions.
The cuts are expected to be implemented over an initial phase, provided the deal is approved by shareholders and the competition watchdog, and a subsequent round of cost cuts once News Corp has had more time to assess the ARM operations across regional Queensland and northern NSW.
However, there are no plans to shut ARM titles, which include The Gympie Times, The Chronicle in Toowoomba and the Ballina Shire Advocate, provided they remain profitable…..
ARM recorded a 42 per cent drop in earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortisation to $3.4m for the six months ended June 30, on revenues of $89m, which were down by 6 per cent.
APN announced its ARM sale plans in February as part of its efforts to focus its business on the more lucrative radio and outdoor advertising sectors.
News Corp should benefit from picking up extra printing plants. It distributes The Australian and The Courier-Mail throughout Queensland from presses in Brisbane and Townsville. The acquisition included presses in Yandina, Warwick and Rockhampton, which will cut the distribution costs, although APN closed a printing plant in Toowoomba last year.
The ARM newspapers were divested by News Corp as part of its acquisition of The Herald & Weekly Times group in 1987.
Labels:
jobs,
murdoch,
News Corp,
newspapers
Monday 5 December 2016
Prime Minister 'Truffles' Turnbull polls zero
Malcolm Turnbull faces a perilous final parliamentary week as voters turn against his leadership, key legislation teeters against Senate manoeuvring, and an emboldened Tony Abbott openly criticises the government while virtually demanding a ministry, according to The Canberra Times on 2 November 2016.
The article went on to say:
The poll showed the government lagging behind the Labor opposition at 49 per cent to 51.
Formerly the Coalition's greatest asset, Mr Turnbull's falling personal standing appears to be leading the broader decline, dropping 8 percentage points since June and a colossal 53 percentage points over the last year.
An equal percentage of voters now either approves or disapproves of the way Mr Turnbull is doing his job, giving him a net approval rating of zero.
Worse still, Mr Turnbull has slipped sharply on a range of important leadership characteristics while his opponent, Bill Shorten, has made some improvements.
The latest Fairfax-Ipsos survey appears to bear this gloom out:
One has to suspect that by now Malcolm Turnbull is experiencing a sensation akin to a sharp pain between his shoulder blades every time he turns his back on the right-wing hardliners in his ministry.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)