Antinuclear

Australian news, and some related international items

China reprimands Australia on AUKUS and submarines that risk nuclear weapons proliferation, and make Australia target.

Chinese FM urges Australia to correct irresponsible moves, fulfill its nuclear non-proliferation obligations Global Times Nov 04, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Wang Wenbin on Thursday commented on Australia’s signing of the AUKUS deal with the US and the UK, saying it is an “extremely irresponsible” move that create risks and undermine regional peace and stability, urging Australia to abandon the Cold War mentality and fulfill its international nuclear non-proliferation obligations.


The French ambassador to Australia Jean-Pierre Thebault lashed out on Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison on Wednesday over a scrapped $67 billion submarine deal previously signed between two countries. ….

Commenting on the French ambassador’s remarks on Australia, Wang noted that the AUKUS nuclear submarine cooperation is not just a diplomatic spat between a few countries, but a serious matter that will create risks of nuclear proliferation and undermine regional peace and stability.

“It is extremely irresponsible for the Australian government to ignore its international nuclear non-proliferation obligations and the serious concerns of regional countries and the international community in pursuit of its own interests,” Wang said……..  

Chinese military experts warned that Australia’s signing of the deal will potentially make itself a target of a nuclear strike if a nuclear war breaks out even when Washington said it won’t arm Canberra with nuclear weapons, because it’s easy for the US to equip Australia with nuclear weapons and submarine-launched ballistic missiles when Australia has the submarines.  https://www.globaltimes.cn/page/202111/1238189.shtml

November 6, 2021 Posted by | AUSTRALIA - NATIONAL, politics international, weapons and war | Leave a comment

Australia at COP26 – a damaging presence


COP26: it’s half-time at the crucial Glasgow climate change summit – and here’s the score, The Conversation, Wesley Morgan, 5 Nov 21, Research Fellow, Griffith Asia Institute and Climate Council researcher, Griffith University

………………….Missing the moment: The Australian Way

While the rest of the world is getting on with the race to a net-zero emissions economy, Australia is barely out of the starting blocks. Australia brought to Glasgow the same 2030 emissions target that it took to Paris six years ago – even as key allies pledged much stronger targets.

Prime Minister Scott Morrison arrived with scant plans to accompany his last-minute announcement on net-zero by 2050. The strategy titled The Australian Way, which comprised little more than a brochure, failed to provide a credible pathway to that target. It was met with derision across the world.

On the way to Glasgow, at the G20 leaders meeting in Rome, Australia blocked global momentum to reduce emissions by resisting calls for a phase out of coal power. Australia also refused to sign on to the global pledge on methane.

Worse still, Australia is using COP26 to actively promote fossil fuels. Federal Energy Minister Angus Taylor says the summit is a chance to promote investment in Australian gas projects, and Australian fossil fuel company Santos was prominently branded at the venue’s Australia Pavilion.

The federal government is promoting carbon capture and storage as a climate solution, despite it being widely regarded as a licence to prolong the use of fossil fuels. The technology is also eye-wateringly expensive and not yet proven at scale……. https://theconversation.com/cop26-its-half-time-at-the-crucial-glasgow-climate-change-summit-and-heres-the-score-170869

November 6, 2021 Posted by | AUSTRALIA - NATIONAL, climate change - global warming, politics international | Leave a comment

Billionaires Not Morally Qualified to Shape Civilization

Billionaires Not Morally Qualified to Shape Civilization, Consortium News, November 3, 2021  We’re talking about a class which could easily put a complete halt to human beings dying of starvation, writes Caitlin Johnstone. But they don’t.  By Caitlin JohnstoneCaitlinJohnstone.comHuman civilization is being engineered in myriad ways by an unfathomably wealthy class who are so emotionally and psychologically stunted that they refuse to end world hunger despite having the ability to easily do so.

The United Nations has estimated that world hunger could be ended for an additional expenditure of $30 billion a year, with other estimates considerably lower. The other day Elon Musk became the first person to attain a net worth of over $300 billion. A year ago his net worth was $115 billion. According to Inequality.org, America’s billionaires have a combined net worth of $5.1 trillion, which is a 70 percent increase from their combined net worth of under $3 trillion at the beginning of the Covid-19 pandemic.

So, we’re talking about a class which could easily put a complete halt to human beings dying of starvation on this planet by simply putting some of their vast fortunes toward making sure everyone gets enough to eat. But they don’t. This same class influences the policies, laws, and large-scale behavior of our species more than any other.

……….how absolutely insane it is that we allow this class to shape our civilization.

And we most certainly do allow them to shape our civilization.

Take Bill Gates. He spends a fortune on narrative control ranging from immense contributions to The Guardian to tens of billions of dollars in grants and he’s committed hundreds of millions of dollars to shady political influence groups as well. He’s been influencing Covid policies around the world, from intervening against the waiving of vaccine patent restrictions to facilitating the worldwide rollout of digital vaccine passports; he’s been giving countless media interviews about Covid-19 and vaccines despite having no medical degree or indeed any qualifications at all apart from a net worth of $136 billion. This is after falsely pledging to give his immense fortune away over a decade ago; his net worth has more than doubled in that time.

Jeff Bezos has been a contractor with the Pentagonthe CIA and the NSA, and experts have claimed that Amazon is trying to control the underlying infrastructure of the economy. As sole owner of The Washington Post he ensures that a hugely influential news outlet will always be staffed by people who will help manufacture consent for the status quo upon which his empire is built, and his grand vision for humanity involves shipping us offworld to breed in giant rotating space cylinders………

The World Economic Forum has laid out an agenda for giant corporations to move beyond their unofficial and unacknowledged role as unelected rulers of our world and become open partners in the governance of world affairs alongside our official elected governments, with more power than ever before.

There are almost infinite examples I could highlight, but I think my point is clear. Billionaires and billionaire corporations own our media, influence our thinking, manipulate our economies, interfere in our politics, determine the fate of our ecosystem and shape our world. And they are the very least qualified among us to be doing so……… https://consortiumnews.com/2021/11/03/billionaires-not-morally-qualified-to-shape-civilization/

November 6, 2021 Posted by | Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Australian given a ‘Fail’ for first week performance in Glasgow — RenewEconomy

Climate groups give Australia a ‘fail’ score at the half-way point of COP26, after its failure to set a new interim target and its promotion of fossil fuels. The post Australian given a ‘Fail’ for first week performance in Glasgow appeared first on RenewEconomy.

Australian given a ‘Fail’ for first week performance in Glasgow — RenewEconomy

November 6, 2021 Posted by | Uncategorized | Leave a comment

From solar duck to platypus: Ground-breaking energy shift changes demand curve — RenewEconomy

A ground-breaking trial that saw hundreds of WA businesses modify their energy use and solar output to help stabilise the grid is being extended. The post From solar duck to platypus: Ground-breaking energy shift changes demand curve appeared first on RenewEconomy.

From solar duck to platypus: Ground-breaking energy shift changes demand curve — RenewEconomy

November 6, 2021 Posted by | Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Glasgow Brief: Big “anti-coal day” as Taylor gets a dressing down — RenewEconomy

Anti coal day but Poland does a back flip, 2°C global warming appears within reach, and Taylor buttonholed in Glasgow. The post Glasgow Brief: Big “anti-coal day” as Taylor gets a dressing down appeared first on RenewEconomy.

Glasgow Brief: Big “anti-coal day” as Taylor gets a dressing down — RenewEconomy

November 6, 2021 Posted by | Uncategorized | Leave a comment

November 5 Energy News — geoharvey

Opinion:  ¶ “More And More: Five Offshore Wind Stories I’m Watching” • I am a person who spends a lot of time thinking about climate change and consumption. Need a little clean energy pick-me-up? Offshore wind is offering more and more excitement as it looks to become a large-scale reality off our shores. Here’s what’s […]

November 5 Energy News — geoharvey

November 5, 2021 Posted by | Uncategorized | Leave a comment

“Pacific Bully:” Australia accused of greenwashing climate finance commitments — RenewEconomy

A new report suggests Australia is a bad neighbour in the Pacific, using international aid to bully Pacific countries into silence over climate dissent. The post “Pacific Bully:” Australia accused of greenwashing climate finance commitments appeared first on RenewEconomy.

“Pacific Bully:” Australia accused of greenwashing climate finance commitments — RenewEconomy

November 4, 2021 Posted by | Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Few realistic options for Defence to fill its submarine ‘capability gap’ before new nuclear fleet


Few realistic options for Defence to fill its submarine ‘capability gap’ before new nuclear fleet, ABC By defence correspondent Andrew Greene  4 Nov 21
  In a blistering National Press Club address on Wednesday, France’s ambassador warned that Australia may have created a submarine capability gap of up to 20 years by cancelling the contentious $90 billion project with his nation.

Much of what Jean-Pierre Thebault said during his hour-long critique of the federal government is rigorously contested, but what is clear is that the navy faces a looming headache on how to replace its ageing Collins Class submarine fleet.

Acquiring nuclear submarines will take decades, and over the next year or so Defence is studying the numerous American

and British options available, as well as the various regulatory and workforce hurdles involved……………….

The scrapped French design was considered the best conventionally powered option, so now there are few options for the government if it wants to replace the operational capability provided by the ageing Collins Class submarines before nuclear-powered boats arrive.

Build, buy or borrow? None of the options are easy

Soon after the AUKUS bombshell was dropped in September, government ministers floated the prospect of Australia leasing submarines, but most military experts don’t believe this option is viable.

Very few nations have ever leased a submarine, and Australia’s AUKUS partners — the United States and United Kingdom — don’t appear to have any “spare” nuclear-powered boats lying around. 

A similar option being discussed would be the forward deployment of one or two Virginia Class American submarines in Western Australia, or even the permanent basing of the US boats in Fremantle. ………………. https://www.abc.net.au/news/2021-11-04/few-realistic-options-to-fill-submarine-gap/100592100

November 4, 2021 Posted by | AUSTRALIA - NATIONAL, weapons and war | Leave a comment

Foreign Minister Marise Payne to visit South-East Asia to ease fears over AUKUS, submarine plan


Foreign Minister Marise Payne to visit South-East Asia to ease fears over AUKUS, submarine plan, ABC, By foreign affairs reporter Stephen Dziedzic, 3 Nov 21
,  Foreign Minister Marise Payne will conduct a major visit to South-East Asia in the coming days as the federal government moves to calm anxieties about Australia’s nuclear submarine program and bed down a new strategic partnership with peak regional body ASEAN.

Key points:

  • Indonesia has raised concerns Australia’s submarine program could fuel an arms race in the region
  • Chinese ministers and officials have been attempting to rally support for their stance
  • Defence Minister Peter Dutton says nations are welcoming efforts to balance China’s military might

Senator Payne is expected to visit Indonesia, Malaysia, Cambodia and Vietnam on the trip.

Cambodia has just taken over the chairmanship of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN), while both Malaysia and Indonesia have sharply criticised Australia’s plan to build nuclear-powered submarines under the AUKUS technology pact with the United Kingdom and the United States.

The ABC has been told Indonesia’s President Joko Widodo “repeatedly and forcefully” raised concerns about the nuclear submarines program when Prime Minister Scott Morrison met virtually with ASEAN leaders last week, reiterating Indonesia’s concerns the program could fuel an arms race in South-East Asia………………………….    https://www.abc.net.au/news/2021-11-03/foreign-minister-marise-payne-in-se-asia-to-rally-aukus-support/100589452

November 4, 2021 Posted by | politics international, weapons and war | Leave a comment

More than 40 countries to make pledge to end coal generation, but not Australia — RenewEconomy

Around 190 countries and organisations, including subnational governments, banks and utilities, expected to sign pledge to end coal use. The post More than 40 countries to make pledge to end coal generation, but not Australia appeared first on RenewEconomy.

More than 40 countries to make pledge to end coal generation, but not Australia — RenewEconomy

November 4, 2021 Posted by | Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Global emissions to surge past pre-Covid, as world fails to grasp ‘green recovery’ — RenewEconomy

Global greenhouse gas emissions will surge past pre-Covid levels, as the world returns to old practice, despite calls for a “green recovery”. The post Global emissions to surge past pre-Covid, as world fails to grasp ‘green recovery’ appeared first on RenewEconomy.

Global emissions to surge past pre-Covid, as world fails to grasp ‘green recovery’ — RenewEconomy

November 4, 2021 Posted by | Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Is bigger always better when it comes to solar modules? — RenewEconomy

Large scale solar developers in Australia are starting to explore new, larger, module sizes in their installations. There are now many large modules on the market. But is bigger always better? A large scale PV power plant not only delivers consistent green energy, but is also a significant financial investment over 25 years. Long term…

Is bigger always better when it comes to solar modules? — RenewEconomy

November 4, 2021 Posted by | Uncategorized | Leave a comment

What the most affected regions need from COP26 — The Earthbound Report

I’ve been in Glasgow for the last couple of days, a city full of people, groups, campaigns and delegations all competing for attention. My email inbox is the same – packed with demands from every conceivable interest group, legitimate or illegitimate. Why COP26 must hold a session on vegan diets. Why this is the COP […]

What the most affected regions need from COP26 — The Earthbound Report

November 4, 2021 Posted by | Uncategorized | Leave a comment

World’s biggest solar and storage project proposed for South Australia — RenewEconomy

Photon and RayGen set sights on what they claim will be world’s biggest solar and storage facility, to be built in South Australia. The post World’s biggest solar and storage project proposed for South Australia appeared first on RenewEconomy.

World’s biggest solar and storage project proposed for South Australia — RenewEconomy

November 4, 2021 Posted by | Uncategorized | Leave a comment