Posts Tagged ‘Australia’

Natural wonders in Kenya, Australia and Japan declared World Heritage Sites

The Lakes System in the Great Rift Valley in Kenya, the Ningaloo Coast in Australia and the Ogasawara Islands in Japan have been inscribed on the World Heritage List, following the recommendations of IUCN.

IUCN – News

Clean_Up: Nominations now being accepted for Clean Up Australia Awards, including the Site Coordinator & Local Hero Award. http://bit.ly/5GrCF3

Clean_Up: Nominations now being accepted for Clean Up Australia Awards, including the Site Coordinator & Local Hero Award. http://bit.ly/5GrCF3

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Clean_Up: View and download the Clean Up Australia Day 2010 TV and Radio CSA to be played across Australia. http://bit.ly/5ClnF7

Clean_Up: View and download the Clean Up Australia Day 2010 TV and Radio CSA to be played across Australia. http://bit.ly/5ClnF7

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Clean_Up: 2010 marks the 20th anniversary of Clean Up Australia Day. Help make a difference by registering a site http://bit.ly/5N3AnN

Clean_Up: 2010 marks the 20th anniversary of Clean Up Australia Day. Help make a difference by registering a site http://bit.ly/5N3AnN

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Clean_Up: Ian Kiernan on Channel 7 Sunrise this morning discussing the top rubbish picked up during Clean Up Australia Day 2009 http://bit.ly/9rmCzc

Clean_Up: Ian Kiernan on Channel 7 Sunrise this morning discussing the top rubbish picked up during Clean Up Australia Day 2009 http://bit.ly/9rmCzc

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Clean_Up: Ian Kiernan was in Melbourne and Geelong to launch Clean Up Australia Day 2010 http://bit.ly/cfhWsm

Clean_Up: Ian Kiernan was in Melbourne and Geelong to launch Clean Up Australia Day 2010 http://bit.ly/cfhWsm

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No to Nuclear Power for Australia: Rudd

CANBERRA, Australia, Feb. 18 (UPI) — Australian Prime Minister Kevin Rudd announced he has ruled out nuclear power for his country.

“Australia has multiple other energy sources and we will not be heading in the direction of civil nuclear power,” Rudd told reporters in Canberra.

Rudd’s remarks came after U.S. President Barack Obama’s announcement Tuesday of federal loan guarantees to build two nuclear reactors.

Australia, however, apparently plans to stay with coal.

“Roll the clock out to 2020, 2050, in terms of the role of coal in total global energy production — it’s huge,” Rudd said.

Coal-fired power stations, known for high carbon dioxide emissions, generate about 80 percent of Australia’s electricity. Australia surpasses the United States as the world’s biggest per capita carbon emitter.

The Australian government has proposed cutting its emissions by 5 percent by 2020 but that target could rise to 25 percent if a global climate protection agreement can be reached.

Rudd said Australia would explore technologies to lower greenhouse gas emissions, including schemes to capture emissions from coal-fired power plants and store them underground. The prime minister noted that Australia is a world leader in carbon capture and storage.

But CCS could create a “time bomb” for future generations, said John Hepburn, a Greenpeace Australia energy campaigner.

“There are concerns over whether it will actually stay underground, basically forever,” Hepburn told Bloomberg News. “You may have to transport the carbon dioxide a long way to a suitable storage site and there are risks associated with that.”

“Australia has probably the most coal-intensive economy on the planet,” Hepburn said to Bloomberg. “The fossil fuel industry, and the coal industry in particular, have a large amount of political influence as a result.”

Hepburn suggests that Australia should aggressively conserve energy and rely more on renewable power to meet the country’s climate goals, rather than depending on either nuclear power or fossil fuels.

Australia is the world’s biggest exporter of coal.

The chairman of the Australian Nuclear Science and Technology Organization, Ziggy Switkowski, said he expected Australian public opinion would soon favor nuclear power.

“There will come a time, perhaps in the next electoral cycle, when the national mood will be strongly pro-nuclear and the government will feel more comfortable about endorsing discussion of nuclear power as part of a longer-term national strategy,” Switkowski told The Australian.

World Nuclear Association estimates list Australia as the world’s third-largest producer of uranium.

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OCEANS: Australia increases threats over Japanese whaling

Australian Prime Minister Kevin Rudd today called on Japan to stop whaling in the Southern Ocean by November, threatening an international legal challenge if Japan fails to meet the deadline.…

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Australia: Beaches ‘at risk’ from climate change

AAP: Iconic Australian beaches such as Bondi in Sydney and Bells Beach in Victoria are vulnerable to the impacts of climate change, environmental scientist Tim Flannery says. Backing similar concerns from federal Climate Change Minister Penny Wong and the government’s Coasts and Climate Change Council, Professor Flannery said it was clear that beaches could be seriously impacted in the wake of sea level rises of a metre or more over the next century. "It’s hardly surprising that …

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Australia sets Japan Nov deadline to halt whaling

Reuters: Australian Prime Minister Kevin Rudd on Friday set Japan a November deadline to stop Southern Ocean whaling or face an international legal challenge to its yearly cull, while Tokyo called for calm dialogue. Whaling has been a sticky issue between the two major trading partners, though both governments in the past have vowed not to let it affect ties. Rudd made his comments on the eve of a visit by Japanese Foreign Minister Katsuya Okada. Rudd said that while Australia preferred …

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