Sunday 9 December 2007

No, Andrew - ratifying Kyoto isn't going to automatically cost Australian taxpayers billions

Prime Minister Kevin Rudd has ratified the Kyoto Protocol and the Herald Sun's Andrew Bolt is not pleased.
With his typical scaremongering style he trumpets that the Rudd Government has given away Australian taxpayers' money.
"THE instant Kevin Rudd signed the paper on Monday to ratify the Kyoto Protocol, he signed away $150 million of your money.
Or possibly as much as $2.5 billion, if reported leaks from senior government figures are right.
If that's what we lost on just day one of our new Kyoto future, imagine what this will cost us in the years ahead. Apart from our sanity, I mean."
Andrew Bolt's Sun Herald blog last Wednesday:
 
Andrew is having a lend of his readers on this issue, because Australia cannot be forced to pay over cash or have money fines imposed for any non-compliance with regard to greenhouse gas emission targets set under the Kyoto Protocol up to 2012.
 
According to compliance provisions of the UN Kyoto Protocol, it will have its targets increased after this if it fails to meet present target commitments.
"In the case of the enforcement branch, each type of non-compliance requires a specific course of action. For instance, where the enforcement branch has determined that the emissions of a Party have exceeded its assigned amount, it must declare that that Party is in non-compliance and require the Party to make up the difference between its emissions and its assigned amount during the second commitment period, plus an additional deduction of 30%.  In addition, it shall require the Party to submit a compliance action plan and suspend the eligibility of the Party to make transfers under emissions trading until the Party is reinstated."
 
If Australia wants to make up the difference in its target shortfall or reduce any penalty target increase for the next commitment period it can of course purchase carbon credits from other member states before 2012.
This would be an entirely voluntary decision.
 
Andrew Bolt may be the most talked about journalist in Australia according to his home newspaper the Herald Sun, but it is for all the wrong reasons. His work belongs in the penny dreadfuls.
 
Kyoto Protocol document:
Kyoto Protocol member compliance:

Is there a doctor in the house? This bloke needs one.

There's a little bloke, who's no longer recognised by most Aussies, wearing a name tag that identifies him as 'Johnny Win-some, Lose-a-lot, Rotten-to-the -core, Howard'. This fella, who has emerged on the speakers circuit, is endeavouring to make a name for himself by touting about this, that and other things. The prime 'other things' topic he's on about is how the Liberals can return from their political grave by simply, now get this funny one, behaving themselves.

Johnny Appleseed should stop beating around the bush and start speaking with the lot most responsible for their kamikaze-like performance. For starters, he should take the super dry religious freak David Clarke and his crackpot cronies aside and tell them a few hard facts about life.

Read more about "Behave yourself and you'll win: Howard to Libs" at:

http://www.theage.com.au/news/national/behave-yourself-and-youll-win-howard/2007/12/08/1196813083754.html

At last. A High Court challenge to NT intervention

A High Court challenge to the Howard Government's Northern Territory 'intervention' is now proceeding.
 
"THE constitutional challenge that former indigenous affairs minister Mal Brough warned could destroy the emergency intervention in the Northern Territory is expected to go before the full bench of the High Court in March.
Traditional owner Reggie Wurridjal and the Bawinanga Aboriginal Corporation will challenge the legality of the Commonwealth's five-year acquisition of land under the intervention and question its ability to seize assets of indigenous corporations.
They will also challenge the scrapping of the permit system, which allows indigenous communities to decide who comes in and out."
 
It is noteworthy that this attempt to redress wrongs being done in the name of emergency social intervention is not being undertaken by the new Rudd Government (which has only promised a review of some aspects of the supporting legislation) but by some of the indigenous people most affected.
It is to be hoped that the applicants are able to focus the full attention of the High Court on these matters, for Parliament had certainly lost its wits when these measures were allowed to come into existence.

Pacific solution ends but questions remain

The new Federal Labor Government appears to be moving in the right direction with regard to a more humanitarian stance towards legitimate refugees.
However, I have not heard any mention of changing the status of territories such as Christmas and Cocos Islands which were excised by the Howard Government in its hardline lockout of boat people.
November 24 was about more than WorkChoices, education, health and home affordability. Let's hope that Kevin Rudd remembers this.

The post-election Liberals just can't help themselves

It seems the bloody nose received by the Liberal Party on election night is acting like burley tossed into shark-infested waters.
Shadow-Treasurer Malcolm Turnbull's latest contribution to the violent feeding frenzy is to let it be known that he now disputes the legitimacy of the recent Liberal Party leadership vote.
Once extensive media coverage was achieved he then issued a hair-splitting denial. An unedifying spectacle.
If this internal wrangling continues Brendan Nelson's leadership might be over by mid-2008.
However it will take much longer for the general public to take this political party seriously after all the recent dummy spits.

Saturday 8 December 2007

Brendan Nelson - a man for all seasons or is he just another political con artist?

It would seem that Brendan Nelson has become the latest fashion accessory on the Australian political scene.

Yes, Brendan can rise to the occasion, whatever the occasion. Want a Labor voter in your midst? Just call on Brendan. He'll be happy to accommodate your needs. Want a Liberal voter? Then don't hestitate, give Brendan a call.

Brendan has the rare capacity possessed only by fair dinkum political chameleons. He can change political colour, no matter what the occasion.

The Australian (December 8) carries a report headed " Nelson admits 'wrong, stupid' lie"

Read it at:
http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/story/0,25197,22889501-5014046,00.html

Will John Howard become the 'Guy Fawkes' effigy atop North Coast bonfires in the future?

After almost eleven years of stubborn denial and laggardly response to climate change, the former Howard Government has left Australia in a position where the Australian Bureau of Agricultural and Resource Economics December 2007 report can state that this country's wheat, beef, dairy and sugar commodities "could decline by an estimated 9-10 per cent by 2030 and 13-19 per cent by 2050" due to the effects of climate change.
With our export of key agricultural commodities likely to "decline by 11-63 per cent by 2030 and 15-79 per cent by 2050".
Australia is predicted to be one of the worst hit countries in terms of reductions in agricultural production and export, and because such a lot of our wool, wheat, sugar, beef, veal and lamb goes for export our balance of trade is going to resemble a third world country's economic outlook.
It seems almost inevitable that John Howard's personal attitude to climate change will result in Australia ceasing to be the lucky country within a generation.
It is by no means certain that the new Rudd Government will have the luxury of time to turn this situation around or to make a significant impact on this gloomy scenario. 
The NSW North Coast sugar industry would be unable to survive if the percentage decline in production was uniformly distributed, as there would not be a reliable harvest to keep the Broadwater and Harwood mills viable.
It is likely that North Coast residents will see John Howard as the same type of folklore bogeyman as the English Guy Fawkes - stupid and destructive.
His likeness will deserve to burn in effigy whenever a local bonfire is lit.
ABARE December 2007 report - climate change section:
The Australian article on ABARE report:
 

The new broom in Commonwealth-State health policy

The new Federal Minister for Health, Nicola Roxon, has given the states and territories one week to come back with answers on how they will clear their elective surgery waiting lists so that people are not waiting for surgery beyond a medically acceptable time.
One has to hope that last Friday's meeting between Ms. Roxon and her state counterparts was as productive as reported.
The NSW North Coast also has to hope that specific health funding promised by Labor during the recent federal election campaign flows quickly through to the NSW Dept. of Health and onto the local area health service, so that our district and base hospitals will see the practical results of a much needed catch-up in infrastructure and services.

Will the Cowper electorate see even less of Hartsuyker now?

Nationals MP for Cowper Luke Hartsuyker has just joined the Coalition outer shadow ministry with the portfolio of business development and independent contractors.
The esteemed Mr. Hartsuyker never did live up to his promise to regularly visit areas across his Cowper electorate, and once Yamba was slated to move out of his seat at the 2007 federal election he effectively abandoned this small town.
So it will be interesting to watch how he performs as a North Coast MP holding his federal seat on a reduced margin. Especially as he takes the junior ministry carrot and tries to parley this into a higher profile within the Coalition.
I'm tipping that Cowper will see even less of its MP than before.