John Madigan, an Australian Hero! (If Only We Had a Man Like Him!!!)

A First Rate Senator (John Madigan) Skewers

a Third Rate Human Being (Simon Chapman)

Victorian Senator, John Madigan delivered an utterly brilliant speech in the Commonwealth Senate this week. See the video below; Hansard (transcript) follows.

As to the Senator, John Madigan provides a salient example of what can happen when decency, integrity and courage all combine in defence of the weak and vulnerable among us; and in pursuit of the truth. The man is made of fearless stuff; and, in our view, stands as one of the Parliamentary Greats: William Wilberforce and his 26 year campaign to end slavery readily springs to mind. The passion with which he delivers this speech is, self evidently, the product of the man’s compassion and empathy; as he says: “every life matters and every life is important”. Hear, hear!

As to the speech, it can be covered in two words: “truly wonderful”.

***

COMMONWEALTH OF AUSTRALIA
SENATE
Hansard
TUESDAY, 17 JUNE 2014
BY AUTHORITY OF THE SENATE
PROOF

Senator MADIGAN (Victoria) (23:20): I rise to speak tonight on the privilege of this parliament to operate without fear or favour. Members and senators have the right to undertake their duties freely to represent their constituents — it is the reason we are here. Any attempt to gag a senator or member of parliament, any attempt to exert influence by means of threat or intimidation is a breach of parliamentary privilege. This could incur the most serious penalties. Tonight I will speak of such an attempt by a high-profile Australian academic. This academic has a track record of making fun of people in regional and rural communities who are sick. He trades in scuttlebutt. He makes consistent attacks on anyone who makes a complaint against his network of corporate buddies. This academic has become the poster boy for an industry which has a reputation for dishonesty and for bullying.

I have a policy of playing the issue, not the man. Policies should always go before personalities. It is a personal credo, one I have practised all my life and specifically in my professional duties since my election in 2010. But since I have been investigating matters related to wind turbines for almost 10 years now I have recorded a consistent track record of vilification, denigration and attack by those on the other side of this debate. This is an industry that sucks hundreds of millions of dollars in subsidies from the public purse. This industrial power generation sector is an industry that masquerades under a false veneer of ‘saving the environment’.

The wind industry is about one thing in this country: it exists to make people rich at the expense of many rural and regional Australians, their lives and their communities. My investigation shows it does not decrease carbon dioxide, it does not reduce power costs, it does not improve the environment. And this academic in question stands shoulder to shoulder with the wind industry companies and their colourful — and I use that term deliberately — executives. He promotes their products. He attacks their critics. He attends their conferences. He rubs shoulders with their henchmen. He is, in the words of the former member for Hume, Alby Schultz — who was a great campaigner on this issue, I might add — devoid of any decency and courage.

But, first, some background. My party, the Democratic Labour Party, has a long tradition of standing up for principle in the face of enormous opposition. My party was born in conflict and forged in sacrifice. No other political party in Australia can boast that its parliamentary founders — 51 in total, including 14 ministers and a state Premier — were prepared to sacrifice promising political careers to uphold the belief dedicated to freedom from undue and corrupt influence. The DLP was the first Australian political party to promote the vote for 18-year-olds. We were the first political party to call for equal pay for equal work and equity in education funding. We were the first political party to call for an end to the White Australia policy. And when our veterans returned from Vietnam, bloody but unbowed, DLP parliamentarians marched in their ranks while the rest of Australia turned their backs.

The DLP is a party of principle. We respect the dignity and the sanctity of life. From the womb to the grave, from the primary school to the factory floor, we see every life as unique and having intrinsic value. This is the cornerstone of the DLP; this is the foundation upon which I place every vote. That is why my attention has been turned to the wind industry for almost a decade now, even before my election to the Senate. I have seen firsthand the devastation it has caused communities. I have listened firsthand to the stories of wrecked families’ lives: family farms destroyed and small outback areas torn apart. I have seen the empty homes in Victoria at Waubra, Macarthur, Cape Bridgewater and Leonards Hill. I have listened to country people tell me stories of corporate bullying and deceit, and of corporate fraud in matters of compliance. I have repeatedly called for one thing on this issue: independent Australian research into the health problems that wind farms apparently cause. That is all — independent research. It is a question of justice. It is about getting to the bottom of this issue.

So when I spoke with Alan Jones onto 2GB on 27 March, I made one simple point. I told Mr Jones we need to be careful about people who profess to be experts in this area. For the benefit of the Senate I repeat what I said in
that interview:

… when we talk about people, using the title, using a title, such as Professor, let us be clear crystal clear here Alan. Most people in the community assume that when you use the title Professor, that you are trained in the discipline of which you speak. And I ask people, look and check. What is the person making these proclamations about other people’s health? What is the discipline they are trained in of which they speak? Because most people in the public assume when you speak of an issue of health, that you are trained in the discipline of which you speak, and there are people making pronouncements and denigrating people who are not trained in human health.

I stand by this statement. It is fair and reasonable to encourage people to look behind the blatant campaigning done by people like Professor Chapman of the University of Sydney.

But it is the statement that has prompted him to threaten me, utilising a law firm that was instrumental in the set-up of Hepburn Wind. He has threatened to sue me for libel over this statement unless I pay him $40,000 plus costs. He has threatened to sue me for libel unless I organise an apology on the website of 2GB and an anti-wind farm website called Stop These Things. He has threatened me with contempt of parliament and a breach of parliamentary privilege if I raise these matters in the Senate. This reaction by Professor Chapman is something that my more experienced parliamentary colleagues have labelled a blatant try-on. It is another attempt by the wind industry to silence me, to scare me off and to intimidate me. It is a case of a Sydney university academic firing shots across the bow of the blacksmith from Ballarat.

This is something he has done before now, tweeting about my position on this issue, always in the context of my background as a blacksmith — a background, I add, that I am enormously proud of. I remain one of the wind industry’s most stubborn and outspoken critics. I will not be silenced. I will not give up on the injustice inflicted on people who claim to be impacted by living near turbines. I will not stop. My comments to Alan Jones were a series of rhetorical statements or questions about the assumptions members of the public should be entitled to make when somebody professes to be qualified to speak about an issue of public health. In other words, I was asking people to check that so-called experts on this issue are relevantly trained and qualified. It is a reasonable request. Our media and the internet are crawling with self-appointed experts. Daily we operate in a cacophony of opinion presented as fact.

Professor Chapman has been an outspoken critic of those who have dared to question the wind farm orthodoxy. But is Professor Chapman a medical doctor? Is he legally entitled to examine and treat patients? Is he qualified in acoustics or any other aspect of audiology? Is he a sleep specialist? Does he hold any qualifications in bioacoustics or physiology or neuroscience? How many wind farm victims has he interviewed directly? How many wind farm impacted homes has he visited? Professor Chapman claims to receive no payment from the wind industry. How many wind industry conferences, seminars and events has he spoken at? How many wind industry events has he attended? Writing on the Crikey website in November 2011, Professor Chapman lamented how many conferences do not pay speaker’s fees, and, when one conference organiser refused to pay his hotel bill, he withdrew. This is the same Professor Chapman who was photographed at a campaign launch in Melbourne by the Danish wind turbine manufacturer Vestas. Did Vestas pay your hotel bill and other costs, Professor Chapman? These are reasonable questions — they put in context his actions.

I take this opportunity to draw the attention of the Senate to the discovery of a 2004 PowerPoint presentation by Vestas employee Erik Sloth to the former Australian Wind Energy Association, now the Clean Energy Council. This demonstrated Vestas knew a decade ago that safer buffers are required to protect neighbours from noise. Vestas knew their preconstruction noise models were not accurate. I draw the attention of the Senate to a quote from the presentation that Vestas knew then that ‘noise from wind turbines sometimes annoys people even if the noise is below noise limits.’ This is confirmation that the global wind industry have known for more than a decade that their turbines impact on nearby residents. How can Professor Chapman reconcile his ridicule of the reasons numerous people have been forced to abandon their homes with the knowledge that the company initiating this campaign he attended knew a decade ago there were problems?

As a public health academic, Professor Chapman displays a lack of compassion for people who claim to be suffering debilitating effects from pervasive wind turbine noise. Professor Chapman’s undergraduate qualifications were in sociology. His PhD looked into the relationship between cigarette smoke and advertising. I question his expertise, I question his qualifications and I question his unbridled motivation to promote and support the wind industry at the cost of people’s lives, homes and communities. I question Professor Chapman’s lack of interest in speaking with wind industry victims. Professor Chapman has a record of public denigration of victims. I refer to his tweet in February this year about ‘wind farm wing nuts’.

One of the important things about this fight that is going on across rural Australia is that it is country women who are in the front line. Farmers’ wives are running hard, fighting to save their families, fighting to save their homes, fighting to save their communities. It is often these women who suffer the most denigration. It is a roll call of honour — people like Mary Morris of South Australia; Dr Andja Mitric Andjic in Victoria; Sonia Trist,Joanne Kermond and Melissa Ware at Cape Bridgewater; Colleen Watts in New South Wales; and, of course, the extraordinary Sarah Laurie in South Australia.

One more example: Annie Gardner and her husband, Gus, have lived and worked happily and healthfully for 34 years on their farming property in south-west Victoria. This came to a sudden halt in October 2012 when the first 15 turbines of the Macarthur wind farm began operation. In a recent letter to the AMA Annie said she is now able to get only two or three hours sleep each night in her own home. She writes: ‘At the time of writing this letter, I am suffering terribly from the infrasound emitted by the 140 turbines located far too close to our property. I have a bad headache. I have very strong pains shooting up through the back of my neck and into my head. I have extremely sore and blocked ears and very painful pressure in my nose. I have pressure in my jaws and my teeth. My heart is pounding. I can feel the vibration going through my body through the chair like an electric charge. The infrasound in our bedroom was appalling. I could feel the vibration through the mattress and the pillow like an electric charge through my body. My head felt as if a brick was on it, and the pressure and pain in my nose was extreme.’

Annie Gardner would be what Professor Chapman would call a ‘wind farm wing nut’. Writing on a green movement website earlier this year, Professor Chapman said protesting against wind farms is a fringe activity as if to suggest that the hundreds of people who attended and spoke at anti-wind farm forums I have held across my home state of Victoria and interstate are simply collateral damage. I cannot live with such a utilitarian view. As I said, even putting aside the highly questionable environmental, social and economic benefits of wind farms, every life matters and every life is important. I have sat in people’s homes and kitchens. I know firsthand the suffering they experience from these industrial developments. Professor Chapman’s attempts to gag me are the same as his attempts to silence those who object to the great wind farm scam. It is part of a greater attempt to silence open and transparent debate on this issue. It does no service to academia or to science already under much attack. It does nothing to advance discussion or progress.

Surely the big businesses behind this attempt — the entities who are funding it, like Bleyer Lawyers, who have worked for Hepburn Wind — should remember cases such as McDonald’s and Gunns. For the environmental movement to attempt this shallow legal shooting of a mere messenger is poor judgement in my view. Bullies corporate or otherwise never get far. Surely it is apparent that companies that use the courts to silence opposition lose out in the court of public opinion. To borrow words from the great human rights campaigner Malcolm X:

I’m for truth, no matter who tells it. I’m for justice, no matter who it’s for or against.

If Professor Chapman proceeds with this action, I look forward to having him answer in court those questions I have raised here tonight — questions about his qualifications, his expertise and his links with the wind industry financial or otherwise. I look forward to his cross-examination under oath as equally as I look forward to mine. I say this: his action, if it proceeds, is doomed in a legal setting or elsewhere for one reason; it is not based on the truth.
Senator Madigan 

One phrase sums up the Senator’s attitude and approach to the wind industry’s vast (and, as he puts it, “colourful”) cast of bullies and thugs: Sic semper tyrannis – “thus always to tyrants.” More power to John Madigan.

John Madigan

 

Turn Off the Money Tap, the Windweasels will Scurry!

Fears for renewables after energy target ‘described as government largesse’

 

Report: wind farms
The renewable energy review is expected to deliver a draft report next week. Photograph: Picasa

Windfarm owners say the head of Tony Abbott’s renewable energy review recently told them they were foolish to “build a whole business model on government largesse”, raising fears he will recommend a severe winding back of the renewable energy target.

Simon Holmes a Court, the founding chair of Hepburn Wind, a community windfarm, told Guardian Australia he had been astonished by the comments from businessman Dick Warburton at a meeting last week.

Meanwhile, the now-independent Climate Council has released a report arguing Australia’s coal-fired power stations are among the oldest and dirtiest in the world and difficult to retrofit with carbon capture and storage technology – leaving renewables such as wind as the least-cost “zero emissions” option.

Holmes a Court said Warburton asked “didn’t we feel foolish basing a whole business model on government largesse”. The “government largesse” being referred to was the renewable energy target (RET) that was first introduced by the Howard government, has enjoyed bipartisan support ever since and has attracted about $18bn in investment.

“If the RET was to be abolished our project will fold. Two thousand people invested in this community windfarm on the basis that this was settled bipartisan policy. We are not feeling foolish, we are feeling betrayed,” Holmes a Court said.

Warburton’s review is expected to deliver a draft report to government next week.

The Coalition went into the election promising to keep the RET, which underpins investment in energy sources such as wind and solar, but saying it would review the fact that the policy was exceeding its original goal of delivering 20% renewable energy by 2020 because of falling electricity demand.

But, after the election, the Coalition began debating whether the RET should be scrapped altogether or – a more likely outcome – “grandfathered” so only existing projects will benefit.

The terms of reference for the RET review said it would look at “the extent of the RET’s impact on electricity prices, and the range of options available to reduce any impact while managing sovereign risk”.

And even government backbenchers who question the science of climate change and oppose the RET concede its total abolition would constitute “sovereign risk” – a situation where governments change the rules after investment decisions have already been made.

George Christensen, who the climate-sceptic Heartland Institute is sponsoring to address its conference in Las Vegas next month and who chairs the Coalition backbench industry committee, said there were “conflicting views within the Coalition because we are acutely aware of its impact on power prices but on the other hand there is a strong argument we should not disadvantage people who have invested on the basis of what was bipartisan policy”.

But the Institute of Public Affairs (IPA) thinktank – which has long lobbied against the RET – has used a submission to the Warburton review to argue for its abolition, dismissing concerns that abolishing the RET would constitute “sovereign risk”. Like Warburton, the IPA suggests businesses should not have based investments on government “favours”.

“Sovereign risk involves a ‘taking’ of property and should be avoided because, ethical issues aside, it creates great uncertainties for investment, especially investment with long payback times. But sovereign risk from the government withdrawing a favour is different from when it takes a property. No investor can reasonably expect a subsidy to prevail for 15 years as is notionally the case with windfarms and other exotic renewable facilities. And there would be few precedents for a government committing its successors to what would become 24 years of worthless expenditure,” the IPA says in its submission.

“If removal of such favourable and lengthy regulatory provisions was considered to constitute reimbursable sovereign risk, the motor vehicle manufacturers now abandoning production in Australia would have a case for compensation … The termination of the renewable energy requirements should be done immediately.”

According to the IPA, there are three options for modifying the RET scheme:

• Reduce it to a “real” 20% of the current electricity market. It says this would reduce the amount of renewables from 41,000 gigawatt hours (20% of what was the estimated size of the market in 2020) to a maximum of 33,000 GWh.

• Allow only the existing and committed projects to proceed as subsidised. This would mean about 15,000 GWh.

• Totally abandon the RET and force “renewables to immediately compete without subsidy, as their adherents always claimed they would eventually be able to do”.

The climate commission, which became a crowd-funded independent body after it was abolished by the Abbott government, will release a report on Tuesday arguing that “the least-expensive zero-emission option available at scale for deployment today in Australia is wind, closely followed by field-scale solar PV”.

“These costs are falling fast as take-up globally accelerates. Wind should be 20% to 30% cheaper by 2020, solar PV is expected to halve in cost,” the report says.

Assuming Australia does need to reduce emissions from its power sector, the report says moving to renewables would be cheaper than trying to “clean up” coal-fired plants.

It says that by 2030, 65% of australia’s power stations will be over 40 years old. The nation’s older power stations cannot be made more efficient without vast expense, and their age limits the potential for retrofit CCS investment, it says.

After the election, Abbott took control of the RET review of his own department and appointed Warburton – a self-professed climate sceptic – to head it.

Warburton, a veteran industrialist and the chairman of the Westfield Retail Trust, described his views on climate science in a 2011 interview on ABC in this way: “Well I am a sceptic. I’ve never moved away from that. I’ve always believed sceptical,’’ he said. “But a sceptic is a different person than a denier. I say the science is not settled. I’m not saying it’s wrong. I’ve never said it’s wrong, but I don’t believe it’s settled.”

Others, including Abbott’s top business adviser, Maurice Newman, want the RET scrapped altogether.

Newman, the former chairman of the ABC and the ASX, has said persisting with government subsidies for renewable energy represented a “crime against the people” because higher energy costs hit poorer households the hardest and there was no longer any logical reason to have them.

Under legislation, the next review of the RET is supposed to be undertaken by the independent Climate Change Authority (CCA) but the government is seeking to abolish the CCA.

Lenore Taylor

Lenore Taylor is the political editor of Guardian Australia. She is a Walkley award winner and a winner of the Paul Lyneham award for excellence in press gallery journalism. She co-authored a book, Shitstorm, on the Rudd government’s response to the global economic crisis.

Renewable Energy Targets Are Ridiculous! They Should ALL be Scrapped!

Queensland says: Time to Scrap the Renewable Energy Target

dick-warburton

The RET Review Panel’s interim report is expected within the next few weeks and we hear there is no joy in it for the wind industry and its parasites. The big end of town have made some walloping submissions – all targeting the mandatory RET as the costly and ineffective market distortion that it is. Here’s The Australian’s take on the position taken by the Business Council of Australia.

RET no longer relevant, says BCA
The Australian
Barry Fitzgerald
13 June 2014

THE nation’s peak business lobby has called for the controversial renewable energy target to be amended ahead of the scheme being brought to an end in 2030.

In a submission to the Abbott government’s expert panel reviewing the RET, the Business Council of Australia said the scheme in its current form was no longer relevant to Australia’s circumstances.

It said the RET was a poor climate change mitigation measure as it reduced greenhouse gas emissions at a high cost of abatement relative to other measures. Without changes, it said, the RET would continue the “wealth transfer from households and business electricity consumers and baseload generators to the renewable energy industry because it increases electricity prices to pay for renewable energy’’.

It said the RET should be amended and suggested “smoothly transitioning out of the RET by amending the target and ending the scheme in 2030”.

It noted when the RET was established under the Howard government, Australia’s electricity demand was expected to grow in perpetuity, and was forecast to reach 300,000 gigawatt hours by 2020. It is now forecast to reach only 230,000GWh due to a decline in demand.

“This means the legislated (20 per cent) target is now forecast to see renewable energy represent at least 27 per cent of Australia’s electricity generation,” the submission said.

“In an electricity market that is already oversupplied, there is no economic justification for electricity consumers to pay for additional generation capacity that is not required.”

The BCA also argued since the cost of “some” renewable energy has declined since the scheme was established, in some cases, it does not require a subsidy to be commercially deployed. It wants the RET amended to a “true” target of 20 per cent by 2020, and the government not to extend the target once all obligations have been met in 2030.

“Any amendments considered as part of the review of the RET should not adversely affect investments that have already been made and should be mindful of their impact on investments currently being planned or already subject to approval,” the BCA said.

The submission repeated previous BCA statements that the RET as its stands distorts electricity markets.
The Australian

The BCA seem to be taking the “Goldilocks” approach – avoiding the “too hot” and “too cold” extremes of the policy spectrum. From what STT hears, it’s not the approach the Federal Coalition are going to take – nor is it the approach of the Queensland State government (see below).

The Federal Coalition have received Parliamentary advice that the recent wind industry tosh about scrapping the RET creating “sovereign risk” is just that (see our post here). And, ditto, concerning wind industry threats about being entitled to compensation from the Commonwealth for “losses” they will suffer when the RET is wound back or scrapped (see our post here).

The advice has stiffened the resolve of a few who were momentarily spooked that scrapping the RET could cost the Commonwealth a small fortune in claims from wind power outfits. Realising the “sovereign risk/compensation” story was nothing more than the deluded and panicked pleading of an industry on the ropes, these boys are now keener than ever to put the RET to the sword.

mark mccardle

And the Queensland State government’s submission to the Panel pulls no punches and calls for the RET to be scrapped. So does Aloca (an aluminium processor) and the Australian Industry Greenhouse Network (representing miners and manufacturers).

Here’s The Australian again.

Rooftop solar should go, RET told
The Australian
Annabel Hepworth
12 June 2014

A LANDMARK review should consider closing the federal scheme promoting the installation of rooftop solar panels and wind farms to new projects, the Queensland government says.

It argues that reducing the Renewable Energy Target will help alleviate bills.

In a submission to the RET review panel chairman Dick Warburton, obtained by The Australian, Queensland Energy Minister Mark McArdle warns that the RET would add about $60 to a typical residential customer’s bill in 2014-15.

“Given the impact it is now having on household bills it is timely that the review panel has an opportunity to propose amendments to the RET ensuring it is appropriately aligned with other objectives such as addressing cost-of-living expenses,” the submission says.

Solar prices have fallen for residential systems, with the prices on the larger-sized 5kW systems dropping by more than 32 per cent between August 2012 and last April.

Even though Queensland has slashed its feed-in tariff — which pays households to generate electricity from the panels — there are still about 3000 new PV systems being installed each month.

And when further cuts kick in on June 30, a significant fall in uptake of solar panels is not expected, the submission says.

“The phasing-out of support is an appropriate approach for maturing or established technologies,” it says.

It comes as some of the nation’s biggest emitters have also called for the RET to be wound back, a move that is being resisted by the clean energy industry.

Alcoa has told the review that the costs involved in the small solar scheme are a “substantial and unwarranted impost on large electricity users” and that the “highly volatile” nature of the scheme “erodes business confidence and planning certainty”.

The Australian Industry Greenhouse Network — which represents big emitters in sectors such as mining and manufacturing — says that the scheme should be abolished as it would lead to “a reduction in the cost burden immediately without affecting existing assets or sovereign risk”.

But the Australian Solar Council argues the solar industry needs the scheme as it is in decline because of the close of state and territory feed-in tariffs, uncertainty created by the RET review and the phasing out of the solar credits multiplier.

Queensland says the RET “undermines the viability of generation assets which were built in response to market signals rather than a government mandated subsidy”.
The Australian

Queensland has seen a huge uptake of rooftop solar – but it hasn’t replicated the wind rush of Australia’s south-eastern states (NSW, Victoria, SA and Tasmania). Queensland has a cluster of 20 tiny 600kw fans (with a piddling 12 MW of installed capacity) at Windy Hill, west of Cairns – run by Thai-turbine terrorists, RATCH; and that’s it. There are a number of “pipe-dream” projects proposed, but none of them have PPA’s – so are going nowhere fast. Hence the Queensland government’s focus on the cost impact of solar panels installed as a result of the RET and feed-in tariffs.

The solar boys shouldn’t be so worried about their future when the RET goes.

With spiralling power costs – and falling panel costs – there is already a healthy market for rooftop solar PV among domestic users (albeit, perhaps, a smaller market in the short-term than if the RET rort continued unabated).

But the big future for solar is in rural and remote locations, where it is more economic for a home, farm or station to go “off-grid”.

Supplying power transmitted through networked grids costs serious money (think installation and maintenance over generations): doing so for a few remote farms or a sheep station – with transmission lines extending for dozens and sometimes hundreds of kilometres just to reach them all – is uneconomic; the returns in revenue from those few users represent a pittance by comparison with the enormous upfront costs of connection to the grid and ongoing maintenance of the connection, over time.

In one case in NSW, a transmission line was upgraded recently at a cost of just over $2million: the line in question services a total of 9 farms, which together pay less than $14,000 in annual network service fees. The revenue recovered will never repay even a fraction of the cost of the upgrade – in the result, that cost will effectively be borne by all power consumers, thus subsidising the few remote users involved. The example cited is not an isolated case.

In NSW, the State government has just announced plans to privatize parts of its electricity network. It also has serious plans to address the costs of supplying remote rural homes and towns on the rural part of the network (which it plans to retain) by way of “off-grid” solar solutions.

The plan is fairly simple. Instead of maintaining transmission lines to small, remote rural towns, remote homes, farms or sheep stations, a “stand-alone solar system” will be provided. Solar panels sufficient to provide for the town or customer’s needs will be installed; with battery storage; and a diesel generator for back up. The idea has been around for 20 years, but with increasing costs attached to maintaining remote transmission lines and falling solar PV costs the concept has come into its own (see this paper from 1995 here).

The forecast cost of providing such a stand-alone solar setup to a home, farm or station ranges from between $35,000 to $70,000 per unit – depending, obviously, on the capacity of the unit needed to supply the particular customer. The manner in which these systems can be consumer-financed is being explored at the moment (with a lease/buy-back option on the table). The units are likely to last at least 20 years and, even allowing for maintenance costs of the units, will be far more economic than maintaining thousands of kilometres of transmission line and network gear for the sake of a relative handful of remote customers.

desert-sun

Solar trumps wind in the scenario above simply because inland Australia has an abundance of sunny days – even in winter – thereby giving solar PV a reasonable degree of reliability; whereas, no-one in their right mind would rely on the vagaries wind for anything (see our posts here andhere).

Moreover, solar PV prices continue to fall and face downward pressure due to the scale of China’s investment in manufacturing capacity. The Americans and the Germans – who also piled into solar panel making – are currently crying foul over being under-cut by Chinese panel manufacturers, trying to prevent the Chinese from competing in Europe and the US.

STT understands that the smartest among the solar boys – aware of the plans above – are already sharpening their pencils ready to do some serious business. Stand-alone solar – taking users off-grid in remote locations – doesn’t require the “support” of the fat pile of power consumer subsidies currently generated by the mandatory RET and REC Tax: it just makes pure economic sense and, therefore, good business. We wish them well – for a happy, prosperous and unsubsidised future.

Narndee Station  PAYNES FIND

The Whole CO2 scam, was designed to steal our money–legally!

Asthma caused by carbon dioxide–not a chance

I just received a post that included commentary by the great Morano on how the EPA and the Bamster would like to do an agit prop head fake–make carbon dioxide an air pollutant that causes asthma.

 

In the world of public perceptions is science just a secondary consideration–sure it is–big lies and little lies are what agit prop is about.

Morano makes the argument that the EPA has found asthmatic children such a good hook, they had to conflate carbon dioxide regs with air pollution regs. Gina McCarthy starts spouting numbers about reduced asthma attacks, and heart attacks.

http://mobile.wnd.com/2014/06/global-warming-threat-now-its-asthma/

Well, in fact small particle air pollution doesn’t cause heart attacks or asthma.

Sorry Marc, you can easily back up a couple more steps in your criticism of this crap.

The epidemiology is so bad on small particle air pollution that the EPA had a human exposure project going for the last 20 years hoping to find something that would be good evidence. They admit in sworn statements to the court in Virginia in our lawsuit to stop the human exposure experiments that the small associations they find and have found in premature death populations studies don’t prove anything.

Asthma is increasing in incidence and air pollution is declining dramatically.

Carbon dioxide cannot be an allergen, and it cannot increase pulmonary problems or health problems until it gets to above 10% or 10000 ppm in the ambient or inspired air. It presently sits at 400 ppm, or 0.04%. That’s the air we breath in, the air we breathe out has a carbon dioxide level of 4% or 4000 ppm.

The only way that small particles would be related to asthma is allergens in the air, pollen, and such, and allergenic particles are proteinacious so they stimulate immune reactions. The Immune system is designed to identify molecules that are foreign to the body and set up inflammatory reactions to fight the invasion.

In the case of an allergic reaction, the mast cells are engaged and release histamine that causes itching, rashes, welts (we call urticaria), angioedema (swelling of tissues with fluid released from histamine effects) swelling and inflammation of the airways, causing stridor and wheezing.

The treatment is antihistamines and cortisone type steroids to reduce the release of fluids and inflammatory mediators that cause allergic rashes and swelling and wheezing. Pretty simple, but you can count on the EPA and the lefty greenies to lie and deceive. Amazing they can do such a thing on top of the evidence that Asthma goes up as air pollution goes down. But agit prop is not about telling the truth.

Show a pic of a pretty kid with oxygen on and a stack in the background with steam coming out (portrayed as “smoke”) and watch the mommies put on their matching tee shirts.

Milloy and I have waxed eloquent on the bad air pollution epidemiology at JunkScience and American Thinker

http://junkscience.com/?s=asthma+and+air+pollution

Links to dunn essays

EPA

Jon Samet silliness acsh 2005

Part 1

http://heartland.org/policy-documents/epa-junk-science-air-pollution-deaths

http://junksciencecom.files.wordpress.com/2013/12/epa-junk-science-on-air-pollution.pdf

Part II on legal precedents that allow delegation and discretion.

http://junksciencecom.files.wordpress.com/2013/12/mpre-on-epa-and-air-pollution.pdf

more on the delegation/discretion problem

http://junkscience.com/2014/01/30/dingell-says-scotus-screwed-up/comment-page-1/#comment-201664

http://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMp1103332

Harvardresearch claims sm part cause cancer.

http://www.reuters.com/article/2011/10/28/us-air-pollution-idUSTRE79R5NM20111028

Subsidies make the energy world go round

http://heartland.org/policy-documents/subsidies-make-energy-world-go-round

2013 EPA project

Holding EPA to account Joe Barton speech

http://www.americanthinker.com/blog/2012/03/holding_the_epa_to_account.html

EPA can be stopped

http://www.americanthinker.com/blog/2012/03/holding_the_epa_to_account.html

a strategy to stop the epa science abuse

http://www.americanthinker.com/2012/04/a_strategy_to_stop_epa_science_abuse.html

the EPAs unreliable science

http://www.americanthinker.com/2012/03/the_epas_unreliable_science.html

epa unethical research

http://www.americanthinker.com/2012/06/epas_unethical_air_pollution_experiments.htm

Milloy and Dunn at JPANDS on EPA Human Experiments

http://www.jpands.org/vol17no4/dunn.pdf

EPW report on Beal Brenner and the playbook

http://www.epw.senate.gov/public/index.cfm?FuseAction=Files.View&FileStore_id=b90f742e-b797-4a82-a0a3-e6848467832a

http://junkscience.com/2013/11/16/epa-hearing-exercise/

http://junksciencecom.files.wordpress.com/2014/03/dunn-on-epa-battle.pdf

http://junksciencecom.files.wordpress.com/2014/04/dunn-let-to-congress-ii-with-att.pdf

http://junksciencecom.files.wordpress.com/2014/04/dunn-let-to-ehp-on-the-study.pdf

http://junksciencecom.files.wordpress.com/2014/04/dunn-let-ii-to-drs-in-congress.pdf

http://junksciencecom.files.wordpress.com/2014/04/dunn-let-to-deans-1.pdf

Legal strategies for EPA problems

http://junksciencecom.files.wordpress.com/2014/03/2nd-and-3rd-epi-highlights-ref-manual.pdf

http://junkscience.com/2013/11/16/epa-hearing-exercise/

http://junkscience.com/2014/02/20/lawyer-losers-who-work-for-our-side-rich-losers-but-still-losers/

http://junkscience.com/2014/02/27/physician-condemns-epa-cargo-cult-science-guess-who/

http://junkscience.com/2014/02/23/daren-jonescu-on-climate-science-totalitarian-thugs-and-hypocrites/

http://junkscience.com/2013/11/16/epa-hearing-exercise/

http://junkscience.com/2014/04/01/epa-medical-schools-complicit-in-unethical-and-immoralillegal-human-experiments/

California enviro policy issues

http://www.americanthinker.com/2010/03/californias_toxic_air_scare_ma.html

toxic air scare

http://www.americanthinker.com/2010/03/science_and_the_toxic_scare_ma_1.html

Milloy Ozone study in CA

http://junkscience.com/2013/09/03/study-ozone-not-linked-with-asthma-hospitalizations-in-major-california-hospital-system/

Milloy study on small particles in CA

http://junkscience.com/2013/12/26/epa-air-pollution-scare-debunked-by-best-data-set-ever-assembled-on-particulate-matter-deaths/

.
Asthma is not caused by air pollution. Asthma is an allergic disease.

Take a look at the commentary here at JunkScience and scroll down until you get to Milloy’s report on a multi year study of ozone and asthma in southern CA. No Association.

But before that you get to a Johns Hopkins study that shows that dirty environments for small children desensitizes them and reduces their rate of asthma.

http://junkscience.com/?s=asthma+and+air+pollution

enough for today.

Proud to Stand With the Aussies Against Destroying our Economy!

Stephen Harper and Tony Abbott won't let climate policies kill jobs

Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper (L) with Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott during welcoming ceremonies on Parliament Hill in Ottawa on June 9, 2014.AFP PHOTO/ Cole BurstonCole Burston/AFP/Getty Images

Photograph by: COLE BURSTON , Ottawa Citizen

The political leaders of Canada and Australia declared on Monday they won’t take any action to battle climate change that harms their national economies and threatens jobs.

Prime Minister Stephen Harper and his Australian counterpart, Tony Abbott, made the statements following a meeting on Parliament Hill.

Abbott, whose Liberal party came to power last fall on a conservative platform, publicly praised Harper for being an “exemplar” of “centre-right leadership” in the world.

Abbott’s government has come under criticism for its plan to cancel Australia’s carbon tax, while Harper has been criticized for failing to introduce regulations to reduce greenhouse gas emissions in Canada’s oil and gas sector.

Later this week, Abbott meets with U.S. President Barack Obama, who has vowed to make global warming a political priority and whose administration is proposing a 30-per-cent reduction of carbon dioxide emissions from power plants by 2030.

At a Monday news conference, Harper and Abbott both said they welcomed Obama’s plan. Abbott said he plans to take similar action, and Harper boasted that Canada is already ahead of the U.S. in imposing controls on the “electricity sector.”

But both leaders stressed that they won’t be pushed into taking steps on climate change they deem unwise.

“It’s not that we don’t seek to deal with climate change,” said Harper. “But we seek to deal with it in a way that will protect and enhance our ability to create jobs and growth. Not destroy jobs and growth in our countries.”

Harper said that no country is going to undertake actions on climate change — “no matter what they say” — that will “deliberately destroy jobs and growth in their country.

“We are just a little more frank about that.”

Abbott said climate change is a “significant problem” but he said it is not the “most important problem the world faces.

“We should do what we reasonably can to limit emissions and avoid climate change, man-made climate change,” said Abbott.

“But we shouldn’t clobber the economy. That’s why I’ve always been against a carbon tax or emissions trading scheme — because it harms our economy without necessarily helping the environment.”

Abbott’s two-day trip to Ottawa was his first since becoming prime minister and it quickly became evident he is on the same political page as Harper.

They are both conservative politicians who espouse the need to balance the budget, cut taxes, and focus on international trade.

Just as Harper once turned to former Australian prime John Howard for political guidance, Abbott is now turning to his Canadian counterpart as a model.

He recalled how he met Harper in late 2005, just before the federal election that brought Harper to power.

“You were an opposition leader not expected to win an election. But you certainly impressed me that day. And you’ve impressed not only Canadians but a generally admiring world in the months and years since that time.”

“I’m happy to call you an exemplar of centre-right leadership — much for us to learn, much for me to learn from the work you’ve done.”

Harper paid tribute to Abbott for the work he has done as chair of the G20, which will hold a meeting in November in Australia.

“You’ve used this international platform to encourage our counterparts in the major economies and beyond to boost economic growth, to lower taxes when possible and to eliminate harmful ones, most notably the job-killing carbon tax,” said Harper.

mkennedy@ottawacitizen.com