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Jennifer Marohasy

Jennifer Marohasy

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Reforming Water Policy Won’t End The Drought: Jennifer Marohasy Speaks with Michael Duffy on Counterpoint

July 7, 2008 By jennifer

Last week the Council of Australian Governments signed an Intergovernmental Agreement for reform of the Murray-Darling Basin. The new plan involves spending $3.7 billion on water projects across the basin. Is this money well spent and how effective will it be ?

Michael Duffy invited me onto his ABC Radio National program ‘Counterpoint’ to discuss the issue this afternoon. You can listen here: http://www.abc.net.au/rn/counterpoint/stories/2008/2296327.htm.

Wagga 034 (copy).jpg
Sheep near Junee, Murray Darling Basin, Photograph by Jennifer Marohasy, July 4, 2008

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Murray River

Virtual Science for Australian Drought Policy Review

July 7, 2008 By jennifer

Australia could experience drought twice as often and the events will be twice as severe within 20 to 30 years, according to a new Bureau of Meteorology and CSIRO report.

Minister for Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry Tony Burke yesterday released the report commissioned by the Rudd Government as part of a review of national drought policy.

According to the media release:

“The overall review, announced in April, will help prepare farmers, rural communities and Australia’s primary industries for the challenges of climate change.

The Bureau of Meteorology and CSIRO climatic report on future drought events – the first of its kind in Australia – will be considered as part of the drought policy review.

Key findings of the Bureau of Meteorology and CSIRO report include:

Under a high scenario, droughts could occur twice as often, cover twice the area and be more severe in key agricultural production areas;

The current definition of ‘Exceptional Circumstances’, which defines areas eligible to apply for Federal Government drought assistance, is out-of-date;

Temperatures currently defined as ‘exceptional’ are likely to occur, on average, once in every two years in many key agricultural production areas within the next 20 to 30 years;

We need better ways of getting information about climate change preparedness to farmers.”

So it seems the government is reverting to scenario-modelling to determine its drought policy and will focus on a worst case scenario by way of a high emissions scenario.

There is really nothing new in this approach, indeed in November 2004 then NSW Premier Bob Carr released a report by CSIRO entitled ‘Climate Change in New South Wales’ alerting us to the possiblity of more frequent droughts. Given this report was also based on scenario-modelling I suggested at the time in my The Land column that the CSIRO could have spiced the report up even more by scenario-modelling a war and a volcanic eruption into it.

——————
The Bureau of Meteorology and CSIRO report ‘An assessment of the impact of climate change on the nature and frequency of exceptional climatic events’ is available at www.daff.gov.au/droughtpolicyreview.

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Drought, Murray River

Australians Deluded by Latest Climate Change Report

July 7, 2008 By jennifer

Since the election of the Rudd Labor government last year Australians seem to be under some sort of delusion that what we do here in Australia will actually have an impact on global climate. These delusions seem to have increased with the release of the Garnaut Climate Change Review Draft Report last Friday.

The front page of the weekend edition of the Sydney Morning Herald suggests that unless we immediately start work on a carbon trading scheme to operate from 2010 – and accept that the price of petrol, gas, power and food will rise – then it will be the end of agriculture in the Murray-Darling Basin by 2100, 5.5 million people will be exposed to dengue virus, it will be the end of the Great Barrier Reef and the beginning of political instability in neighbouring countries.

This is simply not true.

Indeed even Ross Garnaut acknowledges in his report that for there to be any impact on global carbon dioxide levels, the world’s major economies must do something about their emissions. The Professor lists China, the US, the European Union, Indonesia, Brazil, Russia then India, as the world’s largest greenhouse emitters and in that order.

Emissions from Australia make up only about 1 percent of the world total. In reality, we are a nation of just 21 million people at the bottom of the world. There are 1.3 billion people in China (India 1.1 billion, US 304 million and Indonesia 231 million) and given China and most other developing countries have no intension of limiting their greenhouse gas emissions in the short to medium term atmospheric levels of greenhouse gases are likely to continue to increase.

And I am not conceding that the apparently elevated levels of carbon dioxide are driving global temperatures.

Indeed atmospheric levels of carbon dioxide have increased significantly over the last few decades and global temperatures did increase over the period 1975 to 1998, but since then they appear to have plateaued.

The prediction was that 2007 would be really hot, but it wasn’t.

There has been a breakdown in the correlation between increasingly levels of carbon dioxide and global temperatures.

Instead of acknowledging this in his report Professor Garnaut has deferred to two fellows at the Australian National University who he describes as “eminent econometricians” and quotes them apparently concluding that “viewed from the perspective of 30 or 50 years ago, the temperature recorded in most of the last decade lie above the confidence band produced by any model that does not allow for a warming trend” (pg. 113).

Why doesn’t the Professor just acknowledge that over the last 10 years, viewed from now, there has been no global warming and that now is not the time to introduce a radical new emission trading scheme that is sure to force up the price of everything, particularly given that our big neighbours, including Indonesia with a population of 231 million, have no plans to do the same.

The bottom line is that the introduction of an emissions trading scheme into Australia is likely to deliver real economic hardship while delivering no environmental benefit. Indeed it is absurd to suggest that the introduction of an emissions trading scheme in Australia will have any impact on the environment of the Murray Darling Basin or the Great Barrier Reef.

Australians are indeed deluding themselves if they think that by simply paying more for their petrol, they can influence global temperature trends, never mind that there has been no warming for 10 years now.

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Climate & Climate Change, Energy & Nuclear

The Truth is Out There: Graham Young responds to Clive Hamilton

July 4, 2008 By jennifer

Earlier this week, Clive Hamilton, Professor of Public Ethics at the Centre for Applied Philosophy and Public Ethics, threatened to boycott Australian e-journal On Line Opinion because it publishes article by so-called ‘climate change denialists’. Today, the journal’s Chief Editor, Graham Young, responds:

“The idea that truth is relative has taken over some areas of the humanities through postmodernism, theory and forms of Marxist analysis. That’s the school that Clive Hamilton’s argument on global warming comes from… We instinctively know that things do have objective reality and are not power constructs. That it doesn’t matter how many people say it is true if it isn’t.”

In today’s article Graham Young emphasises the importance of trying to understand the facts-of-the matter rather than as Clive Hamilton does, deferring to authority.

While Clive Hamilton has decided that “there was no way I could pretend to have a comprehensive grasp of climate science … [so] I had to decide not what to believe but whom to believe.”

Graham responds, “How do you decide who to believe if you have abdicated your right to analyse the arguments?”

Again on the subject of the truth Graham writes: “We believe that there is such a thing as the truth, and that it is out there, even if none of us will ever perceive it more than dimly.”

According to Graham one way of discovering the truth is to “welcome lobbyists as well as academics, politicians, activists and citizens. We want to put citizens in touch with decision makers and those with influence, and we don’t differentiate between them because they might have a particular point of view, or draw their paycheck from a particular source.

“Our fundamental tenet is that while there is such a thing as the truth it demands constant mining and refining for it to be discerned, and that it is not our place to tell others what to think. Consenting adults can come to this site [On Line Opinion] and see opposing arguments laid out before them and make-up their own minds. Clive is under-estimating the ability of our average reader.

“An ethical approach to argument avoids ad hominem attacks and concentrates on facts and arguments. It treats its opponent’s arguments with respect, and doesn’t misrepresent them, and it researches its own arguments thoroughly and presents them honestly.”

————
Silencing dissent
http://www.onlineopinion.com.au/view.asp?article=7596&page=1

The Sad Demise of On Line Opinion
http://onlineopinion.com.au/view.asp?article=7580

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Philosophy

Ocean Acidification: Photographs from Bob Halstead and a Note from Floor Anthoni

July 2, 2008 By jennifer

Hi Jennifer,

The shallows near Dobu Island off Papua and New Guinea have active underwater fumaroles pumping out virtually pure CO2. The sea grass is extraordinarily lush and healthy and there is very healthy coral reef a few metres away.

Bob Halstead_Dobu Island_May 2008002 copy.jpg
May 2008 in PNG at Dobu Island in the D’Entrecasteaux Group

Bob Halstead_Dobu Island_coral_May 2008003 copy.jpg
May 2008 in PNG at Dobu Island in the D’Entrecasteaux Group

Both photos show bubbles of CO2 which continually flow. I collected samples of gas years ago for a vulcanologist and he reported back to me that it was “virtually pure CO2”.

Unfortunately the water had poor visibility the day I shot the pictures, but it is often clear.

Bob Halstead
www.halsteaddiving.com

And also…

Dear Jennifer,

I have recently updated my article about ocean acidification by reviewing two recent studies.
http://www.seafriends.org.nz/issues/global/acid2.htm

I thought it may interest you.

Dr J Floor Anthoni
Director Seafriends Marine Conservation and Education Centre
http://www.seafriends.org.nz/

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Coral Reefs

New Australian Movie Starring Caroline Marohasy

July 2, 2008 By jennifer

Caroline Marohasy, a reader of this weblog and my daughter, makes her debut in a new Australian revenge thriller ‘The Horseman’ that will premier at the Melbourne International Film Festival.

Caroline and Peter in The Horseman.jpg
Caroline Marohasy and Peter Marshall in The Horseman

If you like this genre of movie you can watch the trailer; but be warned there is lots of blood and guts and violence.

A couple of early reviews include:

“The Horseman is a balls to the wall, edgy thriller. A simple, fast paced action movie – the kind people used to make in the 70’s. Think ‘Get Carter’ in ‘Stubbies’ crossed with Tarantino. If you like your movies bold, hard-core and unapologetic, then keep an eye on director Steven Kastrissios”.
– Greg Mclean (Director of Wolf Creek & Rogue)

“I just saw an advance screener of this film and was left breathless. The Horseman is the most compelling Australian film that I have seen since Wolf Creek. It is taut and relentless, grabbing you by the throat in the opening scene and not letting go until the end credits roll. The film’s frenetic pacing and tight narrative structure brings to mind similarly impactual genre classics like Mad Max and Romper Stomper. Indeed, it belongs to that rare type of thrilling Aussie cinema that gets bums on seats and keeps them there! Kastrissios should be congratulated for such an amazing debut. He should also be paid close attention to: I believe he is set to become an important fixture of the Australian cinema scene.
– Dean Bertram (Director, A Night of Horror International Film Festival)

And a note from Caroline, “Australian independent feature films really need grass roots support, and this one is no exception. So you might become a fan at our Facebook site“.


warning – this is a horror revenge movie with lots of ‘blood and guts’

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Advertisements

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Jennifer Marohasy Jennifer Marohasy BSc PhD has worked in industry and government. She is currently researching a novel technique for long-range weather forecasting funded by the B. Macfie Family Foundation. Read more

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To get in touch with Jennifer call 0418873222 or international call +61418873222.

Email: jennifermarohasy at gmail.com

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