Thursday, 30 May 2019
United Nations asked to pass judgement on the impact of Australian Morrison Government's climate change 'denialism'
The Conversation, May 2019:
Climate change threatens
Australia in many different ways, and can devastate rural and urban communities
alike. For Torres Strait Islanders, it’s a crisis that’s washing away their
homes, infrastructure and even
cemeteries.
The failure to take
action on this crisis has
led a group of Torres Strait Islanders to
lodge a climate change case with the United Nations Human Rights
Committee against the Australian federal government.
It’s the
first time the Australian government has been taken to the UN for
their failure to take action on climate change. And its the first time people
living on a low lying island have taken action against any government.
This case – and other
parallel cases – demonstrate that climate change is “fundamentally a human rights issue”,
with First Nations most vulnerable to the brunt of a changing climate.
The group of Torres
Strait Islanders lodging this appeal argue that the Australian government has
failed to take adequate action on climate change. They allege that the re-elected
Coalition government has not only steered Australia off track in meeting globally
agreed emissionsreductions, but has set us on course for climate
catastrophe.
In doing so, Torres
Strait Islanders argue that the government has failed to uphold human
rights obligations and violated their rights to culture, family and
life.
This case is a show of
defiance in the face of Australia’s years of political inertia and turmoil over
climate change.
It is the first time
people living on a low-lying island – acutely vulnerable in the face of rising
sea levels – have brought action against a government. But it may also be a
sign of things to come, as more small island nations face impending climate
change threats…..
The
Guardian, 13 May 2019:
The complaint will
assert that the Morrison government has failed to take adequate action to
reduce emissions or pursue proper adaptation measures on the islands and, as a
consequence, has failed fundamental human rights obligations to Torres Strait
Islander people.
One of the complainants,
sixth-generation Warraber man, Kabay Tamu, said in a statement: “When erosion
happens, and the lands get taken away by the seas, it’s like a piece of us that
gets taken with it – a piece of our heart, a piece of our body. That’s why it
has an effect on us. Not only the islands but us, as people.
“We have a sacred site
here, which we are connected to spiritually. And disconnecting people from the
land, and from the spirits of the land, is devastating.
“It’s devastating to even imagine that my
grandchildren or my great-grandchildren being forced to leave because of the
effects that are out of our hands.
“We’re currently seeing
the effects of climate change on our islands daily, with rising seas, tidal
surges, coastal erosion and inundation of our communities.”
The non-profit
coordinating the complaint by the Torres Strait Islanders says this will be the
first climate change litigation brought against the Australian government based
on a human rights complaint, and also the first legal action worldwide brought
by inhabitants of low-lying islands against a nation state.
Lawyers with environmental law
non-profit ClientEarth, are representing the islanders, with support from
British-based barristers.
The UN Human Rights
Committee is a body of 18 legal experts that sits in Geneva. The committee
monitors compliance with the International Covenant on Civil and Political
Rights.
The complainants are
alleging that Australia has violated article 27, the right to culture; article
17, the right to be free from arbitrary interference with privacy, family and
home; and article 6, the right to life.
According to briefing
material supplied by ClientEarth, the complaint alleges these rights have been
violated both by Australia’s insufficient
greenhouse gas mitigation targets and plans, and by its failure to
fund adequate
coastal defence and resilience measures on the islands, such as
seawalls.
Lawyers for the
islanders allege that the catastrophic nature of the predicted future impacts
of climate change on the Torres Strait
Islands, including the total submergence of ancestral homelands, is a
sufficiently severe impact as to constitute a violation of the rights to
culture, family and life.
The islanders want the
government to commit at least $20m for emergency measures such as seawalls, as
requested by local authorities, and sustained investment in long-term adaptation
measures to ensure the islands can continue to be inhabited.
They want a commitment
to reduce emissions by at least 65% below 2005 levels by 2030 and going net
zero before 2050 and a phase out of thermal coal, both for domestic electricity
generation and export markets....
The weather is slowly getting colder, but before minds turn to the thought of glowing fire in the hearth remember this....
Sitting before a glowing fire on a cold winter's night is something many people have done at some point in their lives.
However, this has fast become a luxury we as a society can no longer afford.
Because now when we go firewood gathering, sadly we are often taking the last remaining homes in that locality of Australian hollow nesting native birds, small marsupials, reptiles, frogs & insects.
Other things to remember about firewood gathering.......
Fines apply
for removing fallen timber or trees from national
parks or nature reserves.
Collecting
wood from Travelling Stock Reserves
is illegal in New South Wales and you can be fined if caught.
If you'd like
to collect firewood for personal use from a state forest within NSW
you need to apply for a permit and any
timber taken must be paid for in advance.
Firewood
permits are available online from the Forestry Corporation of NSW at: www.forestrycorporation.com.au/about/permits.
These permits only allow the
collection of fallen timber and fines apply if rules are broken.
Removing
fallen timber from roadside reserves is prohibited by many councils, so please
check with your local council before considering collecting firewood from these
areas.
Clearing of native
vegetation on rural land is legislated by the Local Land
Services Act 2013
and
the Biodiversity
Conservation Act 2016
.
Clearing of native
vegetation in urban areas and land zoned for environmental protection is
legislated by the NSW
Vegetation SEPP
.
Please report suspected
unlawful native vegetation clearing to OEH.
You can contact
Environment Line on 131 555 or send
an email to info@environment.nsw.gov.au.
Illegal
activity can also be reported to Local
Land Services on 1300 795 299 or
by contacting your local police station.
Labels:
#standup4forests,
environmental vandalism,
forests,
national parks,
NSW,
trees
Wednesday, 29 May 2019
AMA accuses Morrison Government of deliberately constraining supply of public hospital services
ABC
News, 24 May
2019:
"Have you got
insurance?"
It is one of the first
questions any patient is asked when they walk into an emergency room in the
United States, no matter how sick they are.
And now Australian
doctors are warning our own health system is shifting towards a similar US
managed care model — a patchwork of private and public systems, where health
insurers hold an increasing amount of power.
The president of the
Australian Medical Association (AMA), Dr Tony Bartone, made the comments as he
addressed the group's national conference in Brisbane on Friday.
It was the first time Dr
Bartone has spoken since the Coalition was returned to power, and he gave an
unusually scathing assessment of Australia's health system and the Federal
Government.
He called for further
private health reforms, telling doctors the increasing corporatisation of the
private health system had given insurers unprecedented power within the health
sector.
Dr
Bartone warned that could lead to a system similar to the model in the US,
where patients experience significant variations in care depending on their
insurance cover.
"Insurers should
not determine the provision of treatment in Australia, they should not
interfere with the clinical judgement of qualified and experienced
doctors," he said.
"Australians do not
support a US-style managed care health system, and neither does the AMA."
The AMA has consistently called for more money for public
hospitals, and on Friday Dr Bartone went even further as he accused the
government of "making a choice" to constrain the supply of public
hospital services.
"Let me be clear.
Public hospital capacity is determined by funding," he said.
"The consequences
are significant. They can include increased complications, delayed care,
delayed pain relief, and longer length of stay for admitted patients."
Dr Bartone said the
system was "stretched so tight" elective surgeries were being
cancelled.
"Our public health
system should be better than this. It is unacceptable our public hospitals have
been reduced to this," he said.
"Our public
hospitals are struggling and require new funding to be better tomorrow.....
Bad 4WD behaviour causing significant damage to the South Ballina Beach and its ecology
![]() |
| South Ballina Beach. Photo Ballina Beach Village in Echo NetDaily, 27 November 2018 |
The Northern Star, 25 May 2019, p.9:
Poor behaviour from some
4WD users have attracted the ire of Ballina Shire Council once again.
Councillor Sharon
Cadwallader brought a motion before Thursday’s general meeting to further
consult on what could be done to address the issue of some 4WDers putting
wildlife and the dunes at risk on South Ballina and Seven Mile Beaches.
Richard Gates, who spoke
to the council in support of the motion, said bad 4WD behaviour was causing
“significant damage to the beach and its ecology”, evident in declining pied
oystercatcher and pippie numbers. Cr Cadwallader welcomed extra patrols planned
for both beaches next financial year, but said that wasn’t enough and suggested
a permit system be added to South Ballina Beach, similar to the permit for
Seven Mile Beach.
Councillors agreed the
matter was complex in that the National Parks and Wildlife Service had care of
South Ballina’s beach, and that a co-ordinated approach would be needed with
the Richmond Valley Council to cover the entire beach to Evans Head.
“There’s got to be a
concerted effort,” Cr Cadwallader said.
“We’re not just going to
sit by and watch this beautiful beach of ours become desecrated.”
She showed her fellow
councillors photos, taken on the weekend, of the southern beach trashed with
rubbish including dumped tents and camping chairs.
Other images showed the
dunes at Seven Mile Beach riddled with tyre marks.
Cr Ben Smith said the
State Government was “very much aware” of the dilemma and pointed out it
“didn’t really get much traction” in the lead up to the March state election,
despite noise from the council.
Many councillors saw the
need for action and Cr Cadwallader’s motion was carried unanimously.
Labels:
Ballina,
beaches,
environmental vandalism
Tuesday, 28 May 2019
Abbott-Turnbull-Morrison Government May 2019: new crew on the political ‘Titanic’
With no plans to genuinely address climate change mitigation, in denial concerning the slowing national economy and pretending that Australia is not in breach of its human rights obligations on two fronts (treatment of Aboriginal adults & children and detained asylum seekers), Australian Prime Minister & Liberal MP for Cook Scott 'Liar from the Shire' Morrison released his new ministry list on 26 May 2019.
https://www.scribd.com/document/411541377/Australian-Government-Ministry-List-for-the-46th-Parlaiment-26-May-2019
Coal Seam Gas: Queensland supplies a timely lesson for the rest of Australia
ABC
News, 26 May
2016:
The risk of spreading
toxic groundwater from one of Queensland's worst environmental contaminations
has prompted a ban on coal seam gas drilling in an area where companies are
already extracting gas.
The State Government
quietly created a no-go zone for gas extraction 10 kilometres around the former Linc Energy site in the Southern Inland,
at Hopeland, burying the decision in an environmental approval issued to Arrow
Energy in December.
Despite the ban, Arrow
and QGC still have permission to extract gas within the zone.
On a separate, neighbouring
mining lease — approved in August — Arrow gained approval to ramp up six
existing "pilot" wells for commercial production.
Farmers said they were
alarmed by the revelation and want state officials to come clean about the
risks of groundwater contamination spreading under prime grazing and cropping
land.
The ban is the first
public admission that a burgeoning CSG industry could aggravate the Linc
contamination, where toxic gases were released into groundwater by a
now-illegal process called underground coal gasification.
Cotton grower Brian
Bender's Hopeland property is split by the two Arrow tenements — where CSG
extraction is banned on one side but not the other.
"I think it's a bit
of a joke, really — there are no lines underground," Mr Bender said….
The ABC understands
tests on groundwater contamination were being examined by a trio of experts who
would be called as state witnesses in a criminal prosecution of five former
Linc executives next month.
The failed company
was convicted and fined a record $4.5 million last May for
causing serious environmental harm through its underground coal gasification (UCG) plant.
The District Court heard
in that trial that it could take up to 20 years for groundwater to recover from
Linc's attempts at the now-illegal UCG process, which allowed toxic gases to
escape through fractured rock.
At the time, the state's
then-environment minister described the contamination as "the biggest
pollution event probably in Queensland's history".
A week before Christmas,
Arrow gained approval for 70 wells on a gas tenement to the north-east of the
former Linc site.
It is part of its $10
billion Surat Gas Project, which Premier Annastacia Palaszczuk promoted in a
February media release as Queensland's "biggest resources project since
2011".
Ms Palaszczuk's release
made no mention of the gas extraction no-go zone.
But the state's
Department of Environment and Science approval said Arrow "must not locate
any [CSG] production wells within 10 kilometres [of the Linc site]".
"The extraction of
groundwater as part of the petroleum activity(ies) from underground aquifers
must not directly or indirectly influence the mobilisation of existing
groundwater contamination on [the Linc site]," the environmental authority
said.
It said the department
may force Arrow to model CSG impacts on "groundwater contamination around
[the Linc site] at any time" and present its findings within a month.
But there were no such
conditions for gas drilling in the neighbouring Arrow tenement that surrounds
the former Linc site, where six wells were approved in August…..
But will the Morrison federal government or the remaining seven state and territory governments learn from Queensland's disasterous mistakes?
Apparently not.........
But will the Morrison federal government or the remaining seven state and territory governments learn from Queensland's disasterous mistakes?
Apparently not.........
2GB
Radio, 24 May
2019:
The Minister for
Resources is urging the New South Wales government to approve the state’s
biggest gas project.
Santos Narrabri Gas
Project is aiming to develop gas reserves in northwest New South Wales that
could supply half of the state’s gas needs.
The Resources Minister
Matt Canavan tells Ray Hadley almost all of NSW’s gas comes from other states.
“The problem with that
is, of course, it costs a lot of money to transport gas long distances, so that
has pushed the price up for Sydney based users of gas.
“Things have changed and
we need to reflect that.”
The
Canberra Times,
18 April 2019:
Federal Resources and
Northern Australia Minister Matt Canavan was in Darwin on April 17 to publicise
an April 2 federal budget announcement of $8.4 million in funding to fast-track
development of gas reserves in the Northern Territory's Beetaloo Basin.
"We want to get on
with the job. We want to get the gas up out of the ground and into people's
homes and businesses as quickly as we can," Senator Canavan said in a
statement….
The Beetaloo Basin is
about 500km south-east of Darwin in the Sturt Plateau region between the towns
of Katherine and Elliott and includes pastoral land and indigenous communities.
Around 70 per cent of the Territory's shale gas resources are estimated to lie
in the Beetaloo Basin, reserves that could potentially raise Australia's global
ranking of gas resources from seventh to sixth. Farmers, businesses and
industry are divided over whether fracking should be permitted because of the
risk of pollution to rivers and bores. Pro-fracking advocates argue it will be
a boon for jobs and economic growth.
Labels:
Coal Seam Gas,
environmental vandalism,
mining,
Queensland
Monday, 27 May 2019
Australia 2019: women are still dying violently in unacceptably high numbers
![]() |
| Counting Dead Women, 25 May 2019 |
I say "at least" because the figure above is mainly based on media reports of deaths - how many go unnoticed by the nightly news or daily newspapers is unknown.
Looking back on past posts on North Coast Voices it appears that an average of 1 to 2 female deaths by violence per week is how the years since 2014 have ended.
Despite the Abbott-Turnbull-Morrison Government periodically talking up its approach to ending violence against women the situation is littled changed because women are still dying in unacceptably high numbers.
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)

