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It is left to rural South Australians to oppose the misguided national plan for nuclear waste dumping

Dump opponents meet on ‘country in between’  https://www.eurekastreet.com.au/article/dump-opponents-meet-on–country-in-between Michele Madigan, 02 May 2019

We are the joy, the sadness, the anger and the peace.’ With these moving words, Adnyamathanha Elders Aunty Enice Marsh and Geraldine Anderson opened a significant gathering in Port Augusta last month. People from the Flinders Ranges and the Kimba farming region, still threatened by the federal government’s plans to deposit the nation’s radioactive waste, met again ‘on the country in between’.

For some months now, no further government decisions have been taken — or at least not conveyed — as to the preferred final site for the nation’s long-lived intermediate and low-level nuclear waste.
On 18 December, following the Barngala people’s similar move in August against the Kimba Council, the Adnyamathanha Traditional Lands Association (ATLA) of the Flinders Ranges took to court the local council’s ruling to exclude non-resident Traditional Owners from a community ballot on the matter. Maurice Blackburn Lawyers, representing ATLA pro bono, see the situation as a justice issue. The 30 January decision deadline has come and gone.

Peter Woolford is the chairperson of the aptly named ‘It Goes Against the Grain’ group of farmers and townspeople of the Kimba region who oppose the dump and its threat to their international grain markets. From his long interview for the 7.30 Report on 28 March, only a few brief words survived the final cut, but he was pleased it was his main point: ‘We’re not activists — I’m a third generation farmer.’

His report to the Port Augusta gathering spoke of much activity, notably that the anti-dump farmers’ stand at the Cleve Field Days had attracted 1000 petitions. Meanwhile, farmer colleague Tom Harris, now on the Kimba Council, provides ‘some balance’ to the otherwise pro-dump farmers/townspeople councillors.

Originally bound to the Flinders by the tragic loss of his ten year old brother there in 1959, Greg Bannon, chairperson of FLAG (Flinders Local Action Group), paid tribute to the Adnyamathanha: ‘Support from the TOs in community from the start has been great and inspiring and has given strength to the rest of us who have no home but here.’ FLAG’s many activities include writing letters, making submissions, media appearances, presenting to the local council, and more.
Meanwhile the mental anguish of community conflict and concern — either for country or from the cash benefits promised by government — continues within both communities. The 7.30 Report highlighted this, with people on both (mainly pro) sides of the issue given voice. As Woolford wondered aloud to us in Port Augusta: ‘How is our town to heal, whichever way the decision goes?’

How can serious environmental matters in South Australia become as important in the national consciousness as those in the eastern states?”

Also in April, Friends of the Earth associates, Mara Bonacci and Dr Jim Green, travelled to Port Pirie, Port Augusta, Whyalla and Port Lincoln to meet with councils, election candidates for the Division of Grey, trade unions and Traditional Owners. Months after independent environmental expert David Noonan’s careful study of government documents revealed the ports named to possibly receive the nuclear waste, local people including council members of proposed port towns, still had no idea of this reality.

Younger members of the areas affected are speaking out. Adnyamathanha Candace Champion is standing for the Greens in the coming election. The Kimba young people are asking why they have been given no voice. As Adnyamathanha law student Dwayne Coulthard declares: ‘South Australia is being smashed right now — UCG [Underground Coal Gasification], the Bight and the Nuclear Waste Dump. How do we make this a reality for people?’

Good question! How can serious environmental matters in South Australia become as important in the national consciousness as those in the eastern states? Australia’s intermediate nuclear waste will be dangerous for 10,000 years. As Mara Bonacci explains, ‘It’s Australia’s waste, it’s a national issue, the burden of responsibility shouldn’t fall on two small regional communities.’

The SA Catholic Church recently suffered a great loss at the sudden passing of a key priest, Denis Edwards. Author of many internationally known books on a Christian response to the ecological crisis, Edwards had no hesitation in becoming a No Dump Alliance member: ‘I believe we are called by God to love and to respect this land as a gift, and to protect its integrity for future generations.’Good question! How can serious environmental matters in South Australia become as important in the national consciousness as those in the eastern states? Australia’s intermediate nuclear waste will be dangerous for 10,000 years. As Mara Bonacci explains, ‘It’s Australia’s waste, it’s a national issue, the burden of responsibility shouldn’t fall on two small regional communities.’

The SA Catholic Church recently suffered a great loss at the sudden passing of a key priest, Denis Edwards. Author of many internationally known books on a Christian response to the ecological crisis, Edwards had no hesitation in becoming a No Dump Alliance member: ‘I believe we are called by God to love and to respect this land as a gift, and to protect its integrity for future generations.’Good question! How can serious environmental matters in South Australia become as important in the national consciousness as those in the eastern states? Australia’s intermediate nuclear waste will be dangerous for 10,000 years. As Mara Bonacci explains, ‘It’s Australia’s waste, it’s a national issue, the burden of responsibility shouldn’t fall on two small regional communities.’

The SA Catholic Church recently suffered a great loss at the sudden passing of a key priest, Denis Edwards. Author of many internationally known books on a Christian response to the ecological crisis, Edwards had no hesitation in becoming a No Dump Alliance member: ‘I believe we are called by God to love and to respect this land as a gift, and to protect its integrity for future generations.’

No Dump Alliance is a broad grouping from the SA community, Aboriginal and agricultural representatives. On 29 April, the third anniversary of the day the federal government named Wallerbina, Flinders Ranges as the preferred site, the Alliance called for the scrapping of the present site selection process and the establishment of an independent inquiry to thoroughly explore all the scientifically safe options for management.

The next day, members presented hundreds of petitions to this end to federal member Rowan Ramsey. As Peter Woolford said, ‘Our homes, our communities, our jobs are at risk from this unpopular and unnecessary plan.’

Concerned Australians can offer solidarity by making an online submission here or by writing their own.

Michele Madigan is a Sister of St Joseph who has spent the past 38 years working with Aboriginal people in remote areas of SA, in Adelaide and in country SA. Her work has included advocacy and support for senior Aboriginal women of Coober Pedy in their campaign against the proposed national radioactive dump.

May 4, 2019 Posted by Christina Macpherson | AUSTRALIA - NATIONAL, Federal nuclear waste dump | Leave a comment

Clive Palmer expects to hold the balance of power in Australian Parliament, so will bring in nuclear power

Clive Palmer wants SA to go nuclear,  InDaily, Emily Cosenza 3 May 19 Clive Palmer’s United Australia Party plans to use South Australia’s large uranium deposits and build a nuclear reactor if the party gains the balance of power at the May 18 federal election.  “Japan, USA, China and the rest of the world have cheap, affordable energy with zero emissions from nuclear power,” Palmer said in a first campaign stop in Adelaide…….

Palmer believed his party would hold the balance of power in the Senate and guaranteed the project would be carried out if so.

“We will need about five to six seats and our polling is showing we will win five to six seats pretty easily and we should be able to win more,” he said……..

The previous South Australian Labor government held a royal commission into the issue of nuclear power.

It found building a reactor to supply electricity was not viable but recommended SA consider establishing a nuclear waste dump to earn millions by storing waste from overseas. That idea was abandoned after a citizens’ jury rejected the concept.

But Palmer said the Federal Government should fund the power plant…….. https://indaily.com.au/news/politics/2019/05/02/clive-palmer-wants-sa-to-go-nuclear/

May 4, 2019 Posted by Christina Macpherson | Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Clive Palmer enthuses about nuclear power for South Australia: Labor and Liberal do not agree

Clive Palmer says SA needs nuclear to stop being a ‘backwater’ during federal election visit,  ABC News, 3 May 19  Clive Palmer has described South Australia as a “backwater” which lacks “enterprise, energy and investment” during a campaign visit to Adelaide to spruik his party’s pro-nuclear policies.

Key points:

  • Mr Palmer says if UAP wins the balance of power, it will fight to bring nuclear energy to SA
  • He also wants the Murray-Darling Basin Plan scrapped
  • A royal commission into nuclear energy in SA found it would not be commercially viable

The United Australia Party (UAP) leader wants nuclear reactors built in South Australia as a way of boosting investment and jobs.

The State Government ruled out the nuclear option following a royal commission which concluded in 2016.

A citizens’ jury also rejected a high-level waste dump “under any circumstances”.

However, Mr Palmer said South Australia had the “world’s largest uranium deposits” and should embrace nuclear technology.

“Australia has had nuclear reactors for 50 years at Lucas Heights in the middle of Sydney,” he said.

“There’s no safety issues with them. They operate every day and they’re still there today.”

In 2018, an independent expert review found the Lucas Heights nuclear medicine lab failed modern nuclear safety standards and had a culture of “make-do and mend”.

A contamination incident at the facility was deemed the most serious in the world in 2017 according to the International Nuclear Event Scale — the global grading system for nuclear incidents.

Days after the review was released, another contamination scare at the reactor occurred, in which radiation levels rose “above allowable limits set by the regulator”.

Mr Palmer said he hoped to secure the “balance of power” to work towards establishing “nuclear reactors and a vibrant manufacturing industry in South Australia”. He said any future reactor “may not be, or it may be, Australian-owned”…….

Royal commission ruled out nuclear energy

Both the Liberals and Labor have hit back at Mr Palmer’s remarks, with Labor senator Penny Wong saying they prove “Clive would be devastating to South Australia……

Both the Liberal and Labor parties in South Australia rejected the royal commission’s suggestion that the state should pursue removal of federal prohibitions on nuclear power development.

In a statement, SA Energy Minister Dan van Holst Pellekaan reaffirmed that commitment.  “The State Government does not support the introduction of nuclear power in South Australia,” he said…….. https://www.abc.net.au/news/2019-05-02/clive-palmer-campaigns-for-federal-election-in-south-australia/11069286

May 4, 2019 Posted by Christina Macpherson | AUSTRALIA - NATIONAL, election 2019 | Leave a comment

Low level radiation increases high blood pressure risks – nuclear workers affected

Prolonged job-related radiation exposure increases hypertension odds, Healio Cardiology Today , 3 May 19

Azizova T, et al. Hypertension. 2019;doi:10.1161/HYPERTENSIONAHA.118.11719.

Wakeford R. Hypertension. 2019;doi:10.1161/HYPERTENSIONAHA.119.11892.

 Prolonged exposure to ionizing radiation from working in a nuclear facility led to elevated risk for hypertension incidence, even compared with Japanese atomic bomb survivors, according to findings published in Hypertension.

Tamara Azizova, MD, PhD, and colleagues assessed hypertension incidence risk in a cohort of workers exposed to ionizing radiation.

We believe that an estimate of the detrimental health consequences of radiation exposure should also include noncancer health outcomes,” Azizova, the head of the clinical department at the Southern Urals Biophysics Institute in Chelyabinsk, Russia, said in a press release. “We now have evidence suggesting that radiation exposure may also lead to increased risks of hypertension, cardiovascular disease and cerebrovascular disease, as well.”

The researchers examined data from a cohort including 22,377 workers from a Russian nuclear facility employed between 1948 and 1982, with 429,707 person-years of follow-up. All workers were exposed to external gamma rays, with 76% of workers exposed to alpha particles from internally deposited plutonium.

Mean cumulative absorbed liver doses from external gamma rays were 0.45 Gy in men and 0.37 Gy in women, Azizova and colleagues wrote. Mean cumulative absorbed liver doses from alpha particles were 0.23 Gy for men and 0.44 Gy for women.

At the end of the follow-up period, hypertension cases were verified in 38% of workers (men, 36%; women, 49%), the researchers wrote.

Hypertension incidence was significantly linearly associated with cumulative liver absorbed dose from external gamma rays (excess relative risk/Gy = 0.14; 95% CI, 0.09-0.2). ….

https://www.healio.com/cardiology/vascular-medicine/news/online/%7B2a0f872d-546b-47c3-861c-a7d05ecaaaec%7D/prolonged-job-related-radiation-exposure-increases-hypertension-odds

May 4, 2019 Posted by Christina Macpherson | General News | Leave a comment

Most people now realise that the Adani coal mine expansion is not likely to go ahead

Adani plays a crucial symbolic role in all this. If the Carmichael project went ahead, it would open up the entire Galilee Basin, with catastrophic consequences for the global climate. Conversely, a clear-cut victory over Adani would signal the end of new thermal coalmines in Australia and, before too long, globally.
Meanwhile, Adani’s biggest rival in the Indian power industry, Tata Power, has just announced a strategic plan involving an end to new coal plants and a major shift to renewables.  This might be the signal for Adani, which already has substantial investments in renewable energy, to come to terms with its past mistakes, abandon coal, and look clearly to the future.
Adani’s Carmichael mine is unlikely to go ahead, and most people know it,  https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2019/may/03/adanis-carmichael-mine-is-unlikely-to-go-ahead-and-most-people-know-it  4 May 19

John Quiggin  When the project was launched in 2010, the prospects for thermal coal looked rosy. Today it is hopelessly uneconomic. There’s general agreement that Adani’s proposed Carmichael mine in the Galilee Basin will be a big issue in the current election campaign. If that were to be true anywhere, it would be in the seat of Herbert, based on Townsville, which hosts Adani’s regional headquarters.Yet a recent Newspoll conducted in Herbert estimates the two-party preferred vote unchanged from the knife-edge result of 50-50 in 2016, which saw Labor’s Cathy O’Toole returned with a margin of 37 votes. What is happening here?

The answer is that, whatever happens on 18 May, the Carmichael mine is unlikely to go ahead, and most people know this. Continue reading →

May 4, 2019 Posted by Christina Macpherson | AUSTRALIA - NATIONAL, climate change - global warming | Leave a comment

A new political force in Australia- YOUNG PEOPLE WHO WANT ACTION ON CLIMATE CHANGE

Young people won’t accept inaction on climate change, and they’ll be voting in droves, 

The Conversation, Hannah Feldman, 2 May 19 

PhD Researcher in Science Communication, Australian National UniversityToday young Australians will hit the streets for the second Climate Strike of 2019.

Youths are often brushed off as being politically disengaged, but the Australian Electoral Commission has reported record high numbers of youth enrolment, and climate change will be at the forefront of their minds when many take to the polls for the first time.

Today young Australians will hit the streets for the second Climate Strike of 2019.

Youths are often brushed off as being politically disengaged, but the Australian Electoral Commission has reported record high numbers of youth enrolment, and climate change will be at the forefront of their minds when many take to the polls for the first time…….

While protests are an ancient tradition, Climate Strike is being led entirely by school students. Greta Thunberg, now aged 16, began the School Strike for Climate movement after attracting press to a then solitary protest at Swedish parliament in 2018.

By March 15, 2019, the movement had grown to over 1.4 million studentsin more than 300 cities worldwide.

This movement forces adults to acknowledge climate change is not only impacting the futures of an unknown, unborn generation, but also of those protesting here and now.

Climate change, then, is not only an important issue for under 24-year-olds, but also a deeply personal one. Discussion of climate change often elicits intense emotions like fear and anxiety for their futures.

In a speech earlier this year in Davos, Switzerland, Thunberg said:

adults keep saying: ‘We owe it to the young people to give them hope.’ But I don’t want your hope. I don’t want you to be hopeful. I want you to panic. I want you to feel the fear I feel every day. And then I want you to act……. This movement forces adults to acknowledge climate change is not only impacting the futures of an unknown, unborn generation, but also of those protesting here and now.

Climate change, then, is not only an important issue for under 24-year-olds, but also a deeply personal one. Discussion of climate change often elicits intense emotions like fear and anxiety for their futures.

……. All told, climate change needs to be addressed in a real and meaningful way to win over these new voters. Those who can’t vote this election will soon be charging at the next.

https://theconversation.com/young-people-wont-accept-inaction-on-climate-change-and-theyll-be-voting-in-droves-116361

May 4, 2019 Posted by Christina Macpherson | AUSTRALIA - NATIONAL, climate change - global warming, election 2019 | Leave a comment

HBO’s Chernobyl drama highlights the human cost of nuclear catastrophe

Chernobyl (2019) | What Is Chernobyl? | HBO

HBO’s Chernobyl drama highlights the human cost of nuclear catastrophe  https://www.newscientist.com/article/2201699-hbos-chernobyl-drama-highlights-the-human-cost-of-nuclear-catastrophe/

An intense new HBO miniseries about the world’s worst nuclear accident turns the Chernobyl Soviet scientists into unlikely heroes in its portrayal of a world superpower approaching meltdown  3 May 2019  By Fred Pearce

Fifteen minutes into the second episode of HBO’s gripping saga of the 1986 Chernobyl nuclear disaster, we are treated to an idiot’s guide to how a nuclear power plant works.

It is delivered by a top Soviet nuclear scientist, Valery Legasov, to a hapless, senior Soviet apparatchik as they fly to the unfolding disaster. As a plot device, it helps the viewer understand events as much as the politburo hack.

But it also does something more interesting: it helps establish the nuclear scientist as the unlikely hero of the story. And give us some interesting insights into a pre-collapse Soviet Union.

In a disaster movie about a nuclear accident, told over five hour-long episodes, you might expect the scientists who designed the plant to be the bad guys. But, at least in the first two episodes available for preview, they come out smelling of roses.

For the producers have bigger fish to fry – the entire edifice of communist rule in the Soviet Union, which was then only three years from toppling. It makes for a great story, but also has the ring of truth.

The central human narrative is the tension between boffins and bureaucrats. Legasov, based at the Kurchatov Institute, Moscow, the Soviet Union’s main atomic research institute, is the man who first understood the scale of the disaster.

He devised a way to douse the inferno by pouring thousands of tonnes of sand and boron into the stricken reactor from helicopters, and was also the first to insist on the evacuation of 50,000 local inhabitants who had been left to suffer the fallout by officials intent on covering up the entire disaster.

In later episodes, however, we can expect to see him blamed by politicos, who disliked his appetite for speaking truth to the incompetents in power. So much so that he ends up hanging himself in the stairwell of his apartment on the second anniversary of the accident, shortly after telling his story to Pravda.

This mini-series is brilliant and pointed storytelling, with gruesome early scenes of radiation sickness among the fire crews intercut with the local officials in their bunker, unwilling and unable to comprehend what was happening above them. Again, on the basis of the first two episodes, the story is told without taking too many liberties with the historical truth.

Its main take is that the accident exposed as never before the callousness and dysfunction of the Soviet elite. And that by making this finally visible to Soviet citizens, it undermined the best of Communism, a sense of common purpose.

It is a view shared by academics such as Kate Brown in her recent study of Chernobyl and its aftermath, Manual for Survival (Allen Lane, 2018). The dozens of plants workers, firefighters and helicopter pilots who died putting out the Chernobyl inferno, would never sacrifice themselves in that way again.

The disaster replaced the common purpose with a sense of betrayal. It did not just symbolise the failings of communist rule, but precipitated its collapse.

Early on, the series has Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev declaring angrily that the accident had to be kept secret because “our power comes from the perception of our power”. Chernobyl incinerated that perception, and their power was over. As he strung himself up, one imagines that Legasov already knew the truth.

Chernobyl, starring Jared Harris, Stellan Skarsgård and Emily Watson, premieres 6 May on HBO.

Fred Pearce is a New Scientist consultant and the author of Fallout: A journey through the nuclear age(Granta Books).

May 4, 2019 Posted by Christina Macpherson | General News | Leave a comment

Nuclear waste carefully kept off the political agenda in Australia, NUCLEAR WASTE A HOT POLITICAL TOPIC IN USA

Presidential candidates join Nevada’s nuclear waste fight, SF Gate, Michelle L. Price, Associated Press May 3, 2019  LAS VEGAS (AP) — Nevada’s long crusade to block the creation of a national nuclear-waste dump at Yucca Mountain has pitted the state against a bipartisan group of lawmakers across the country, but a band of presidential hopefuls is joining the early voting state’s cause.

Nevada’s senior senator, Democrat Catherine Cortez Masto, has legislation that would bar the federal government from moving nuclear waste into a state without first receiving permission from the governor and local officials. Last year, Nevada’s two senators were the only sponsors of the measure.

This year, they’ve got company in Democratic Sens. Cory Booker of New Jersey, Kirsten Gillibrand of New York, Kamala Harris of California, Amy Klobuchar of Minnesota, Bernie Sanders of Vermont and Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts.

The six senators’ move to establish opposition to the mothballed Yucca Mountain project is an appeal long-made by presidential candidates hoping to win favor in Nevada, which holds a pivotal role as a swing state and the third state to vote in the Democratic presidential contest.

Any candidate hoping to win the support of Nevadans must be against Yucca Mountain,” Cortez Masto said in a statement Friday in response to a question about the new co-sponsors.  ……
.
On Thursday, as Cortez Masto and Nevada Sen. Jacky Rosen testified in opposition to restarting the licensing project, Sanders issued a statement calling the Yucca Mountain plan “a geological, environmental, and social disaster” that must be abandoned.  …….. https://www.sfgate.com/news/article/Presidential-candidates-join-Nevada-s-nuclear-13817561.php

May 4, 2019 Posted by Christina Macpherson | General News | Leave a comment

The black-throated finch – a species threatened with extinction, if Adani coal project goes ahead

Adani’s Carmichael mine and the small endangered bird that is proving a big problem, ABC News 3 May 19

By Shelley Lloyd  What exactly is the big deal about this tiny seed-eating bird that is stalling the Adani Carmichael coal in central Queensland?

Key points:

  • The range of the black-throated finch has contracted by 80 per cent
  • Birdlife Australia says it is already extinct in NSW
  • The Carmichael mine proposal would consume one of the finch’s key habitats

Last night, the proposed coal mine was dealt a massive blow when the Queensland Department of Environment and Science (DES) rejected Adani’s current management plan for the southern black-throated finch.

It told the Indian miner the management plan “does not meet the requirements of the company’s environmental authority”.

The Carmichael mine would take up one of the last remaining healthy habitats for the black-throated finch.

A DES web page on the endangered bird explains that the black-throated finch (southern subspecies) once extended from Inverell in north-east New South Wales, through eastern Queensland, to the Atherton Tablelands and west to central Queensland.

It said the finch (southern subspecies) range had “contracted by approximately 80 per cent of its former extent over the last 20 years and is now restricted to the northern part of its former range”.

“The black-throated finch (southern subspecies) inhabits grassy woodland dominated by eucalypts, paperbarks or acacias where there is accessibility to seeding grasses,” DES said.

“Recent records from Queensland suggest that riparian habitat is particularly important as it seems to provide shelter within a highly fragmented and modified environment.”

Sean Dooley from Birdlife Australia said the finch was already extinct in New South Wales and that there were now only two small populations left in the world, both in Queensland.

There are believed to be fewer than 1,000 black-throated finches still alive.

There is a small population west of Townsville, but the main population is on the footprint of the Adani mine lease in the Galilee Basin. “Carmichael coal mine is ground zero for this bird,” Mr Dooley said………

Mr Dooley congratulated the Queensland Government for rejecting the company’s environmental management plan for the finch.

“Obviously the Queensland Government would have been under a lot of political pressure and pressure from interest groups to allow this to go through,” he said…….https://www.abc.net.au/news/2019-05-03/how-is-a-tiny-bird-such-a-big-problem-for-adani/11076386

May 4, 2019 Posted by Christina Macpherson | AUSTRALIA - NATIONAL, climate change - global warming, environment | Leave a comment

UK Parliament becomes first in the world to pass motion declaring a’climate emergency’

UK Parliament becomes first in the world to pass motion declaring a
‘climate emergency’. In a symbolic move, the House of Commons had declared
a climate emergency, admitting the need for a cross-party approach that
would enable the UK to set a world-leading standard on climate action.

Edie 1st May 2019
https://www.edie.net/news/9/UK-Parliament-becomes-first-in-the-world-to-declare-a–climate-emergency-/

May 4, 2019 Posted by Christina Macpherson | General News | Leave a comment

Transfer of nuclear material from Scotland to USA

Nuclear material transfer from Scotland to US completed, BBC News, 3 May 20 

A transfer of highly-enriched uranium from Scotland to the US has been completed, the UK’s Nuclear Decommissioning Authority has said.

About 700kg of material formerly held at Dounreay, near Thurso, has been transported in a series of flights using military aircraft since 2016.

In the US, it is to be used in the making of fuel at civil nuclear reactors. [?] 

An agreement between the UK and US banned military use of the material…….

Dounreay, the site of Britain’s former centre of nuclear fast reactor research and development, is being demolished and cleaned up.

The highly-enriched uranium (HEU) was moved in batches from Dounreay to Wick John O’Groats Airport and then flown to the States using US military Boeing C-17 transport aircraft…….

Other material has been transferred from Dounreay to nuclear sites overseas.During the 1990s, nuclear material was sent from abroad to Dounreay for reprocessing.

The customers included power plants and research centres in Australia, Germany and Belgium.  https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-scotland-highlands-islands-48147424

May 4, 2019 Posted by Christina Macpherson | General News | Leave a comment

The Blue Pacific and the legacies of nuclear testing

 The Strategist 1 May 2019| Patrick Kaiku States in the Pacific islands are small in landmass and population. Their limited terrestrial resources and lack of comparative advantage are compounded by their remoteness from global centres of commerce. This obviously has impacts on the costs of doing business and integration into global trade relations. Their invisibility in international relations means that small states must creatively frame their presence in the global community.It’s against this backdrop that the ‘Blue Pacific’, which is touted as an empowering worldview, should be understood. The core principles of the Blue Pacific must be read together with recent developments in the region. In 2017, Pacific Islands Forum leaders endorsed the concept as a ‘driving force’ connecting Pacific peoples ‘with their natural resources, environment, culture and livelihoods’. The Boe Declaration of 2018 formally recognised Pacific islanders’ stewardship over the Pacific Ocean.

While big states such as the US and China are competing for influence in the region, the Boe Declaration makes a case for prioritising the concerns of Pacific island communities. The strategic confrontations of big powers do not feature in the daily lives of Pacific peoples. What’s important to the survival of island states is their environment and the capacity of their resources to meet present needs and the needs of future generations. This logic is seen with the proposed Pacific Resilience Facility, which is a regional pool of resources to manage or mitigate the adverse effects of environmental challenges in the region.

….. a  sticky issue in the region is the potential effects of nuclear contamination of the Pacific Ocean. The legacies of nuclear tests in the Pacific islands include highly radioactive waste materials stored on vulnerable atolls.

In the 1950s, the Pacific Ocean was considered an empty space by the Euro-American powers. With the onset of the arms race during the Cold War, some of the colonial powers used the Pacific as a testing ground for their nuclear weapons. More than 300 nuclear tests were conducted in the Pacific Ocean. Atolls in the Marshall Islands, Johnston Island, Christmas Island and French Polynesia were used as nuclear test sites, casting long shadows into the present.

On one low-lying Pacific island atoll, the toxic legacy of the nuclear tests remains. In 2017, Mark Willacy from the Australian Broadcasting Corporation investigated the nuclear-waste storage facility on the remote atoll of Enewetak in the Marshall Islands. It was there that the US conducted its series of tests of nuclear weapons, including the first full-scale hydrogen bomb. Before it abandoned its nuclear testing program in the 1970s, the US buried contaminated material on Runit Island.

An estimated 85,000 cubic metres of radioactive waste is buried on Runit Island, including some of the world’s most toxic materials. It will take more than 24,000 years for the waste to disintegrate. It’s buried in porous coral and sand and capped by a concrete dome. Marshallese and international non-government organisations are concerned that sea-level rise and major typhoons will destroy the dome, resulting in the contamination of not only the Marshall Islands but the wider Pacific Ocean. Since the sea is a free-flowing matrix of currents and borderless movements of water, a Pacific-wide disaster is a plausible scenario…….

The Pacific island states have an illustrious record in employing collective diplomacy to tackle difficult issues. Since the 1980s, the high-water marks of collective diplomacy have been the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea in 1982, the 1985 Rarotonga Treaty and the global moratorium on drift-net fishing. Currently, small states in the Pacific islands are actively engaged in framing the narrative on global cooperation to deal with climate change challenges.

The Blue Pacific is a timely framework, emphasising a Pacific islands worldview, and is an alternative to the zero-sum confrontations of big powers in the region. More importantly, it stresses the importance of cooperation on Pacific terms in dealing with transnational challenges. The various major powers embroiled in their great-power confrontations in the Pacific ought to be educated about the significance of the Blue Pacific and their participation in advancing the goals of that paradigm. After all, the Pacific Ocean connects all the large landmasses on the Pacific Rim. The state of affairs in the islands is a microcosm of the planet’s chances of surviving global environmental challenges.

Patrick Kaiku is a teaching fellow in the political science department at the University of Papua New Guinea.  https://www.aspistrategist.org.au/the-blue-pacific-and-the-legacies-of-nuclear-testing/

May 4, 2019 Posted by Christina Macpherson | Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Fixing the gap between Labor’s greenhouse gas goals and their policies — RenewEconomy

Switching to 100% renewables, and focusing on energy efficiency, will play key roles in meeting ambitious greenhouse gas targets. The post Fixing the gap between Labor’s greenhouse gas goals and their policies appeared first on RenewEconomy.

via Fixing the gap between Labor’s greenhouse gas goals and their policies — RenewEconomy

May 4, 2019 Posted by Christina Macpherson | Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Global emissions from Australian carbon exports dwarf any domestic cuts — RenewEconomy

Global emissions from Australia’s exported carbon are now more than double our total domestic carbon emissions from all sectors. The post Global emissions from Australian carbon exports dwarf any domestic cuts appeared first on RenewEconomy.

via Global emissions from Australian carbon exports dwarf any domestic cuts — RenewEconomy

May 4, 2019 Posted by Christina Macpherson | Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Wesfarmers dumps coal and turns to electric cars: Australia should follow — RenewEconomy

Just months after selling the last of its thermal coal assets, Wesfarmers – one of Australia’s leading business conglomerates – has made a $776 million play to enter the lithium market and tap into the opportunities of the global switch to electric vehicles. The rest of the country should take note. Last December, Wesfarmers complete……

via Wesfarmers dumps coal and turns to electric cars: Australia should follow — RenewEconomy

May 4, 2019 Posted by Christina Macpherson | Uncategorized | Leave a comment

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1.This month.

Zoom webinar –  “Nuclear Winter: The Environmental Consequences of a Nuclear Exchange.”

April 7th at 11:30 am PST / 2:30 pm EST

Nuclear Winter: The Environmental Consequences of a Nuclear Exchange”

Join us for an informative webinar with renowned atmospheric scientist, Professor Brian Toon, as he discusses the environmental risks and global impacts of a nuclear war. Despite the potential damage caused by the blast from even small nuclear weapons, many countries continue to invest in and expand nuclear arsenals. Professor Toon will provide a scientific assessment of civilian fatalities, agricultural failures, climate concerns, and complications with food supply that would follow any international nuclear conflict. We need to plan how to prevent nuclear conflict and avoid catastrophe. Politicians and military planners must be made aware of global climate and agricultural complications that would ensue. Don’t miss this opportunity to learn from, and engage in, this vital conversation

The Road to War brings a sharp focus to why it is not in Australia’s best interest to be dragged into a war with China which will almost inevitably go nuclear very quickly. The filmmaker has interviewed some of Australia’s senior foreign policy analysts who have vast experience behind them in analysing what really is going on here as the United States rattles its sabres with China. And sets us up to be its proxy, like the poor Ukranians have been fed into the Meatgrinder. So America can remain the Top Dog. The Road to War reveals how the United States through its spy base at Pine Gap and by stationing six nuclear capable B52 bombers in the Top End (without permission from the traditional owners) is making Australia a prime nuclear target if the current war of words suddenly melts down into full scale war.

The Road to War shows the implicit connection between Carbon emissions (the US military uses a whopping 70% of America’s annual petroleum to move its armies and vast War Machine around the globe to its 800+ military bases..but under a loophole wangled at Kyoto, the US military does not have to report its C02 annual emissions). The Road to War starts screening at selected cities and regional centres in March. See the trailer end for details.

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