Barnaby in full throttle in Australian House of Representatives Image: AIMN Network |
Friday, 5 April 2019
Nationals MP for New England Barnaby Joyce throws a tantrum….
News.com.au, 1 April 2019:
Barnaby
Joyce has been forced to issue a grovelling apology to Channel 7 staff who
copped his wrath during an expletive-laden backstage tantrum.
It
has been revealed the former deputy prime minister was in a foul mood on the
night of the New South Wales election, during which he sat on the network’s
broadcast panel.
Viewers
criticised his aggressive attitude on screen, including his treatment of a female
Labor senator, but it paled in comparison to his antics in the green room.
The Australian newspaper today reports Mr Joyce has apologised for
his “behaviour and demeanour” off screen after details were leaked by insiders.
It’s
understood the former leader of the National Party — who resigned his position
last year after it was revealed his mistress and staffer Vicki Campion was
pregnant with his child — was furious about how brief his appearance was
scheduled to be.
“There
were four-letter words aplenty when Joyce first arrived on set and saw his
schedule for the night,” The Australian reported.
An
unnamed insider told the newspaper: “He had the sh*ts supreme about whether he
should even be there.”
A
network source told news.com.au word of Mr Joyce’s behaviour had begun to
spread last week, and it was only a matter of time before it leaked.
The
firebrand politician’s beef was that he was due to appear on screen for just 10
minutes, despite having flown from his home in Armidale.
He
was accompanied by his partner, Ms Campion — he broke off his marriage just
prior to the scandal erupting — and their toddler.
“I
saw the schedule on the (green room) wall,” Mr Joyce told the newspaper. “Then
I saw the closest human being, and I told them what I thought.”
He
apologised for his conduct and said he was tired. After the tantrum, Mr Joyce
was used for the live coverage broadcast for more than two hours.
On
election night, he was criticised by viewers for his rude treatment of
Labor Senator Jenny McAllister, including talking over her.
“I
am surprised that you’d not put water on the list of concerns,” Ms McAllister
said about the National Party’s poor electoral performance in the state’s west.
“You’ve
got these western NSW seats with massive fish kill and a very active
conversation …” she continued before being cut off.
“That
was because of the Greens … you can’t take water to the south, not have it come
to the north and not expect something to die in the middle. It’s the bleeding
obvious,” Mr Joyce said as his fellow panellist tried to get her point across.
“I
think the proposition that’s been put is that there’s been complete
mismanagement of the water system”, she said, before being again interrupted.
“May
I finish my remarks?” Senator McAllister said — a comment met by a shrug from
Mr Joyce.
She
did continue, barely finishing her sentence before Mr Joyce had his say.
“Finished?
You’re wrong,” he said.
The rare Omura’s whale
The
New York Times,
22 March 2019:
An
Omura’s whale in waters off Madagascar in the Indian Ocean. CreditCreditGabriel
Barathieu/Biosphoto, via Alamy
Salvatore Cerchio
stunned the small world of whale science in 2015 when he found examples of a new species in the
wild for the first time. Now, he’s mapped the habitat of that species, called
Omura’s whale after Hideo Omura, a prominent Japanese whale biologist.
The surprise in the
new study, published in Frontiers in Marine
Science, is that Omura’s whales, though little seen, are widespread across the
tropical world.
Dr. Cerchio, a
researcher with the New England Aquarium in Boston, found a population off the
northwest coast of Madagascar,
where he works, and compiled reports of sightings from Japan, Australia, Brazil
and off the coasts of Indonesia, among others. In total, from photographs,
audio recordings, museums and documents, he identified 161 accounts of Omura’s
whales in 95 locales.
Scientists said the
finding is a reminder of how little we actually know about what goes on in the
world’s oceans….
Japanese researchers
first identified Omura’s whales in 2003, based on
a 1998 stranding in Japan and tissue from eight animals killed during Japanese
scientific whaling operations in the 1970s. The Omura’s whales have relatively
small bodies, distinct genetics and unusually shaped skulls, leading
researchers to conclude that the new
species had split off from its genetic cousins 17 million years earlier.
Omura’s whales are
baleen whales, meaning they are filter feeders, and they can be identified by
their asymmetric coloration. The right side of their jaws are white, with a
swirling, smoky splash of light coloration and four bisecting dark stripes on
the right side of their heads, and their backs are decorated with asymmetrical
chevrons. They favor tropical environments more than most whales and don’t
migrate, Dr. Cerchio said.
After publishing his
2015 paper, in which he described more than 40 whales seen in the wild and
expanded their range beyond the Indo-Pacific, Dr. Cerchio said people sent him
pictures of similar looking whales.
“Little by little it
became clear that there were a lot more out there that could be researched and
tallied,” he said.
At the urging of Bob
Brownell, the paper’s senior author, Dr. Cerchio counted images he received,
those he’d stumbled across on the internet, as well as sound recordings and
historical sightings dating back to a 1955 magazine article from Hong Kong
University that misidentified an Omura’s whale as an immature fin whale.
Bob Pitman, a scientist
with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration who was not involved
in this research, said he was surprised to learn the scope of the species’
habitat. “I think most of us whale scientists expected that it would have a
small, relatively localized population,” he wrote.
As Mr. Pitman noted, “if
new whales are still being described, it means we are probably also losing
species of animals that we never even knew existed.”
Labels:
marine life,
whales
Thursday, 4 April 2019
NSW Office of Environment and Heritage is being dissolved. More truthful version – the regions are being scr$wed over to allow Berejiklian Government’s mates a freer hand to develop coastal NSW to death
The
Sydney Morning Herald,
2 April2019:
A government spokeswoman
said the restructuring would enable the administration "to better serve
the people of NSW".
"For the first
time, we have a combined Energy and Environment portfolio and this new
structure will ensure the government can take a holistic approach to this
issue," she told the Herald. "The functions currently performed
by OEH will continue.”
Among staff, though, the
worry was that the oversight separately developed and funded for years would
now be subsumed in the expanded Planning cluster, with job losses one
consequence.
Rob Stokes, a former
environment minister, returns as Planning Minister as part of the government's
post-election reshuffle. Matt Kean will be the new Energy and Environment
minister….
One senior staffer told
the Herald OEH had often provided a dissenting view to Planning, such
as when new housing projects in the Sydney Basin threatened the dwindling
natural reserves. Remaining koala corridors, for instance, were among the
habitats at risk.
Work that had previously
been conducted by inhouse OEH experts was already being diverted to external
consultants - a process staff worry will accelerate with the bureaucratic
overhaul now under way.
"There has already
been a strong shift away from the environment having its own voice
already," the staffer said.
Penny Sharpe, acting
Labor leader and environment spokeswoman, said NSW had now become the only
state in Australia without an environment department.
"One of the first
acts of the Premer - after talking a lot about the environment during the
election - is to abolish the Office of Environment," Ms Sharpe said.
"This is a terrible
outcome for the environment of NSW and it's a betrayal for [voters]," she
said. "We know it was a very important, top-order issue for many,
many people."
The environmental
problems facing the state include more than 1000 plant and animal
species threatened with extinction, an 800 per cent increase in
land-clearing during the past three years, and waterways "that are in
crisis", Ms Sharpe said.
Scott Morrison just can't resist the urge to meddle in Liberal Party candidate selection
Latest version of Scott Morrison on the Net |
Yet another 'captain's pick' is on the cards.....
The
Canberra Times,
31 March 2019:
A Liberal vying to become the party's
candidate for Craig Laundy's old seat has delivered an astonishing condemnation
of the closed-door selection process, just as Prime Minister Scott Morrison
prepares to name his captain's pick for the hotly contested Sydney electorate.
Controversial psychiatrist and writer
Tanveer Ahmed - who is among a number of people under consideration for the job
- slammed the process as unfair and undemocratic, arguing he had been denied
the opportunity to confront his challengers.
It is expected Mr Morrison could
recommend a candidate to replace Mr Laundy in the inner west seat of Reid as
soon as Sunday, to be rubber-stamped by the party's state executive on Monday.
The Sun-Herald understands Dr
Ahmed met with Mr Morrison's principal private secretary Yaron Finkelstein and
factional powerbroker Alex Hawke, the Special Minister of State, and has been
positively vetted.
But Mr Morrison is said to be
considering other options including two women and failed state election
candidate for Kogarah, Scott Yung. Liberal pollsters have also gauged
support for Coca Cola executive Tanya Baini.
Wednesday, 3 April 2019
It is likely to be tears before bedtime for many regional communities as Berejiklian Government restructures government departments
Government
News, 2 April
2019:
The NSW government will abolish key
agencies including the Office of Local Government, the RMS and Jobs NSW under
sweeping changes to the structure of the NSW public service.
A memo from the Department of
Premier and Cabinet obtained by Government News says the Office of
Local Government, along with the Office of Environment and Heritage, will cease
to be independent entities and their functions will be absorbed by a Planning and
Industry Cluster.
The cluster will cover areas such as
long term planning, precincts, infrastructure, open space, the environment and
natural resources.
The RMS, coming under the Transport
Cluster, will also be scrapped as a separate agency and as will Jobs NSW, which
will be merged into the Treasury Cluster…..
Local Government NSW President Linda
Scott said the peak would be seeking assurances from the new local government
minister, Shelley Hancock, and the Premier, that local governments would be
appropriately resourced within the new cluster.
“We’d hope, for example, that the
inclusion into a larger cluster will facilitate real analysis of the massive
amounts of data collected by Government, which should be shared with the sector
to help them deliver great outcomes for the public good,” she told Government
News.
“Local governments welcome a new
opportunity to work with the State Government to set housing targets with
local governments, not for them – to rebalance planning powers by working in
partnership with councils and their neighbourhoods on planning decisions that
affect them.”
However she said the appointment of Ms
Hancock was a stand-alone Local Government Minister was welcomed and had long
been advocated for by LGNSW.....
The memo says the structure of the
public service will also incorporate the following clusters: Stronger
Communities, Customer Service, Health; Premier and Cabinet, Transport,
Treasury and Education.
The following clusters will cease to
exist by July 1: Finance, Services & Innovation; Industry; Planning
& Environment; Family and Communities; and Justice.
The Secretaries Board will be expanded
in members to accommodate more senior public servants to “effectively drive
implementation of the Government’s priorities”.
New appointments under the
restructure:
Michael Coutts-Trotter – Secretary,
Families & Community Services & Justice
Jim Betts – Secretary, Planning and
Industry
Glenn King – Secretary, Customer
Service
Simon Draper – Chief Executive, Infrastructure
Australia
NOTE:
The Grafton Loop of the Knitting Nannas Against Gas
and Greed will be holding a knit-in on Thursday 4 April 2019 at 1pm to peacefully
protest the abolition of the NSW Office of Environment and Heritage. It will be
held outside the electoral office of Nationals MP for Clarence Chris Gulaptis
at 11 Prince Street, Grafton and interested people are welcome to attend.
Hottest March on record in Australia and hottest start to the year
ABC
News, 1 April
2019:
Blair Trewin, senior
climatologist at the Bureau of Meteorology (BOM), said March was a continuation
of what we saw over summer in a lot of ways.
Not only was it the
hottest March, but it has also been the hottest start to the year on record. By a lot.
"It's come in about
2.2 degrees above the long term for the first quarter of the year," Dr
Trewin said.
"That's nearly a
degree hotter than the previous hottest first quarter of the year.
"We've had
the hottest January, we've had the hottest March and
February was also in the top five."
Nearly a degree is a
very large margin to break a record by.
"Even for an
individual month that would be a very significant margin, but to be breaking a
three-month-period record by nearly a degree is something which we would see
very rarely, if ever in a continent the size of Australia," Dr Trewin
said....
It may feel like the
"hottest on record" headline is a constant these days but Dr Trewin
said it was still not exactly normal.
"We're still
getting the occasional cool months but the frequency of record warm months and
seasons has gone up quite substantially in the last decade or so with the
background long-term warming," he said.
"Whilst we've seen
a particularly extreme few months, the background warming trend we see in
Australia, as we do globally, is in the order of 0.1 to 0.2 of a degree per
decade.
"Projections are
that that's expected to continue at least at that rate," he said.
_____________________________________________________________
Key points:
o
March
2019 was the warmest on record for mean, minimum and maximum temperatures in
Australia
o
Rainfall
was below average through the centre of the country but well above average where cyclones hit
o
Outlook
for the next three months suggests continued above-average temperatures
_____________________________________________________________
Labels:
climate change,
weather
Est. 32 per cent of Australian farmers still haven't come to grips with the reality of climate change
ABC News, 31 March 2019:
When the Reserve Bank
announced recently that it was factoring climate change into interest rate
calculations, it underlined a mainstream acceptance of potential impacts for a
warming planet.
Climate change now had
economic consequences.
But resistance to the
premise of human-induced climate change still rages, including in regional and rural
communities, which often are the very communities already feeling its effects.
"When you look at
the results of different surveys going back a few years, farmers were four
times more likely than the national average to be climate change deniers,"
said Professor Mark Howden, director at the ANU's Climate Change Institute.
"That was about 32
per cent versus about 8 per cent for the population average."
So, why do so many
people in regional and rural areas not believe in climate change?
ABC Central West's
Curious project put that question to some experts, who say the answer has more
to do with human nature than scientific reasoning.
Professor Matthew
Hornsey from the University of Queensland has dedicated his academic career to
understanding why people reject apparently reasonable messages.
"The metaphor
that's used in my papers is around what we call cognitive scientists versus
cognitive lawyers," he said.
"What we hope
people do when they interpret science is that they weigh it up in an
independent way and reach a conclusion.
"But in real life,
people behave more like lawyers, where they have a particular outcome that they
have in mind and then they selectively interpret the evidence in a way that
prosecutes the outcome they want to reach.
"So you selectively expose yourself to
information, you selectively critique the information, you selectively remember
the information in a way that reinforces what your gut is telling you."
This is known as
motivated reasoning — and online news source algorithms and social forums are
only enabling the phenomenon, allowing for further information curation for the
individual…..
Professor Hornsey says
there is another force fanning the flames of distrust between the scientific
and non-scientific communities.
"One thing that can
be said without huge amounts of controversy is that there is a relationship
between political conservatism and climate scepticism in Australia," he
said.
To better understand
this, the professor's research took him to 27 countries and found that for two-thirds
of these, there was no relationship between being politically conservative and
a climate science sceptic.
But Australia's
relationship between the two trailed only the United States in strength of
connection, he said.
"What we were
seeing was the greater the per-capita carbon emissions of a country, the
greater that relationship between climate scepticism and conservatism."
Professor Hornsey argues
that per-capita carbon emissions is an indicator for fossil fuel reliance,
which in turn creates greater stakes for the vested interests at play.
"When the stakes
are high and the vested interests from the fossil fuel community are enormous,
you see funded campaigns of misinformation, coaching conservatives what to
think about climate change," he said.
"That gets picked up by conservative media and
you get this orchestrated, very consistent, cohesive campaign of misinformation
to send the signal that the science is not yet in."…..
Professor Hornsey
believes current discourse can make farmers feel as though they are at the
centre of an overwhelming societal problem, triggering further psychological
rejection of the science.
"I feel sorry for
farmers around the climate change issue, because this is a problem that has
been caused collectively.
"Farmers are only a small part of the problem but
they are going to be a huge part of the solution, so I think they feel put
upon.
"They feel like
they are constantly being lectured about their need to make sacrifices to adapt
to a set of circumstances that are largely out of their control."
In 2010, in response to
a drought policy review panel, the Commonwealth initiated a pilot of drought
reform measures in Western Australia.
John Noonan from Curtin
University led the program, which went on to have staggering success in
converting not only participating farmers' attitudes to climate science, but
also in restructuring their farm management models in response to a changing
climate.
"First of all, when
talking with farmers, we didn't call it the drought pilot — we used the name
Farm Resilience Program," Mr Noonan said.
"If you go in to beat people up and have a
climate change conversation, you get nowhere.
"We got the farmers
to have conversations about changing rainfall patterns and continuing dry
spells, rather than us telling them what to do.
"And they told us
everything that we needed them to tell us for us to reflect that back to them
and say, 'Well, actually, that's climate change'.
"If you take a very
left-brain, very scientific approach to these matters, you are going nowhere,
and what we used was very right-brain, very heart and gut-driven — and it
worked."
Mr Evans agrees,
underscoring the deeply personal connection farmers have to the land, its role
in their business approach, and why the message must be managed psychologically
rather than scientifically.
"Ultimately, for a
farmer to confront the reality that this new climate might be permanent,
requires them to go through the five stages of grief: denial, anger,
bargaining, depression and acceptance."
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)