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Jennifer Marohasy

Jennifer Marohasy

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Rick Ness Could Not Eat 77 Cans of Tuna

March 6, 2007 By jennifer

I had lunch last week with Rick Ness, President Director of Newmont Mining in Indonesia, and his son Eric. They were in Australia very briefly and took time to visit us at the IPA when I was in Melbourne.

Journalist Mark Hawthorne from The Age was there and wrote about it the next day with comment that:

“A SMALL group gathered at the Institute of Public Affairs office in Collins Street yesterday to hear the tale of woe of former Newmont executive Richard Ness.

The mining boss is being tried in Indonesia for alleged arsenic and mercury pollution at a mining operation at beautiful Buyat Bay, home of a fishing village and a popular scuba diving spot.

“Government cracks down on polluting miner” made plenty of headlines around the world, but the only problem for green groups and the non-government organisations (NGOs) behind the investigation into the mine is that all the evidence now seems to clear Ness and Newmont of any criminal pollution and, indeed, has revealed a high-level conspiracy to incriminate Ness with falsified evidence…

“Ness’ best advice was to fight fire with fire — especially when tainted evidence was presented by NGOs showing how mercury had “polluted” the food chain. “We went though the data and found they had assumed the average family of two adults and two children under 15 kilograms eats 77 cans of tuna per day,” Ness said.
“I turned up to court and put 77 cans of tuna on the table in front of me. That made my point.” [end of quote]

Eric had visited, and dived, at Buyat Bay just before coming to Australia and describes the experience in a recent blog post:

“It’s actually hard to describe how great the diving is in Buyat, which was one of the first things we did. I’ve been diving since I was about 14 years old and I’ve been fortunate enough to dive in Australia’s Great Barrier Reef, Thailand, the U.S. and a number of different areas throughout Indonesia and I can unequivocally say that Buyat Bay has the best diving I have ever seen. It’s no surprise that Jerry and the North Sulawesi Tourism Office has recently put out a dive book to promote the area as a dive destination. Read the rest of the blog here:
http://www.richardness.org

You’ve seen Rick on a motor bike, remember this blog post: https://jennifermarohasy.com.dev.internet-thinking.com.au/blog/archives/001697.html

Well, here he is underwater:

diving Buyat feb07 RN blog.JPG
Rick Ness diving at Buyat Bay, February 2007

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: People

Shell Fast-Tracking Second Generation Biofuels

March 5, 2007 By jennifer

In August last year when the Australian Prime Minister, John Howard, announced a $1.576 billion funding package over eight-years to promote alternative fuels in particular ethanol I received an email from Ray Wilson with the comment that:

“Ethanol is not a good fuel because a standard petrol engine needs to be extensively modified to use 100% ethanol as it has only half the energy density of petrol.

However, just as one can produce petrol and diesel from coal using the Fischer-Tropsch process, one can use cellulosic (Wood, leaves, grass, grains, etc) matter too to make petrol and diesel by this method. This can be done profitably and the process is well-known…

“The Fischer-Tropsch process is normally used to convert coal to fuels, but it works equally well with cellulosic matter as a feedstock.

So instead of just using the sugar cane juice to make ethanol and discarding the residue, one can convert the entire plant into diesel and petrol and discard very little. Any plant material will do too.

The subsides are available for anyone who wants to proceed with this R&D and the project itself, provided one has the collateral to cover 50% of the Federal loan. I do not have this, so it is very difficult for me to do anything myself. I actually looked into this in some detail recently.

Plant oils are suitable for use as a diesel fuel, but the rest of the plant is discarded as waste. For example, oil-palm nuts are crushed to yield their oil, but the pulp is discarded. Not very efficient.” [end of quote]

Today I received another email from Ray Wilson, this time with comment, “the Germans are using FT [Fischer-Tropsch process] to produce diesel from wood commercially; precisely what I was trying to get going here in Queensland.”

You can read about it at Times Online:

“Ken Fisher, vice-president for strategy at Shell, expects full-scale production on a commercial basis by the middle of the next decade.

“We would like to be the leading provider of second-generation biofuels,” Mr Fisher said. …

All the technologies are based on the Fischer-Tropsch process, invented in Germany in the 1930s to synthesise liquid fuels from coal. The process was initially uneconomic, but was used in Nazi Germany and in South Africa under apartheid when the country lacked access to crude oil.

“The discovery of better catalysts and the rising price of crude is improving the commercial equation…

“Shell has a second BTL [biomass to liquids] investment in Iogen, a Canadian company that this week secured an $80 million (£41 million) grant from the US Government to build a plant in Idaho, which will produce cellulosic ethanol from plant waste and straw. [end of quote]

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Energy & Nuclear

An Open Letter to Sir Richard Branson from Robert J. Rohatensky

March 5, 2007 By jennifer

Dear Sir Richard Branson,

Upon reading the information on the recently announced Virgin Earth Challenge I feel that although I admire the noble effort, I have difficulty with the terms and conditions of the challenge. I believe that if you and the Virgin group of companies were serious regarding improving our planet that you have the resources to make an immediate change in the world energy situation and to lower the risk of climate change.

I believe that we have an initial design for an implementable system that uses indirect solar collection to generate electricity and store thermal energy in an economical, environmentally friendly, scalable, reliable, efficient and location independent manner using common construction materials. This system design is not under limited Intellectual Property protection and a pilot project and further commercial ventures may be initiated under the Virgin brand.

I am challenging you to invest some resources, form an engineering team and take the energytower.org idea and to build some massive bright red convection tower renewable energy systems with the Virgin logo painted on the side.

Sincerely,
Robert J. Rohatensky
Regina, SK Canada
www.energytower.org

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Energy & Nuclear

Al Gore Buys Carbon Offsets from Al Gore?

March 4, 2007 By jennifer

Former US Vice President, Al Gore, has emerged as the world’s best known and greatest advocate for everyone doing their bit to use less energy including at home and/or buying carbon offsets particularly when they travel by aeroplane.

According to Herald Sun columnist, Andrew Bolt, writing in today’s Sunday Mail**, Al Gore not only uses 20 time more power than the average American household at his 20-room, eight-bathroom home in Nashville, but, he buys his offsets through Generation Investment Management and the Chairman of Generation Investment Management is Al Gore.

Surely not!

———————————————–
** I can’t find the column online, it is entitled ‘Time That Gore Saw The Light’ (The Sunday Mail, pg 61, March 4).

Andrew Bolt has a popular blog here: http://blogs.news.com.au/heraldsun/andrewbolt/

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

Have You Been To Church Today: A Note from Roger Burke on Sunday

March 4, 2007 By jennifer

Hi Jennifer,

Have you been to church today? No? Well you have if you believe in the Global Warming summary as purported by the United Nations’ Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (UN IPCC) because the result is based on faith, just like religion, and not science.

Indeed according to Michael Crichton:

“The greatest challenge facing mankind is the challenge of distinguishing reality from fantasy, truth from propaganda. Perceiving the truth has always been a challenge to mankind, but in the information age (or as I think of it, the disinformation age) it takes on a special urgency and importance.

We must daily decide whether the threats we face are real, whether the solutions we are offered will do any good, whether the problems we’re told exist are in fact real problems, or non-problems. Every one of us has a sense of the world, and we all know that this sense is in part given to us by what other people and society tell us; in part generated by our emotional state, which we project outward; and in part by our genuine perceptions of reality. In short, our struggle to determine what is true is the struggle to decide which of our perceptions are genuine, and which are false because they are handed down, or sold to us, or generated by our own hopes and fears.”

Would you take medication that says “most people who take this medication will very likely not die”? The medication wouldn’t be on the shelves in the first place because it wouldn’t have passed the Australian Drug Evaluation Committee requirements. However, assuming it is, I doubt whether most of us would take it. But we are willing to take the IPCC summary “Most of the observed increase in globally averaged temperatures since the mid-20th century is very likely due to the observed increase in anthropogenic [man made] greenhouse gas concentrations”

This brings us back to faith with the “Believers” and the “Sceptics” (or “Deniers”). The Believers whole faith lies on the two words “most likely” and, once you believe, the path is defined. Al Gore has given us the physical “Hell and Damnation” scenario with his movie (an Inconvenient Truth) that is up there with Von Danikin and the Chariots of the Gods. We have the Stern Report that sends us to economic purgatory based on the worst case scenario of those two words. Now we have the fundamentalist Believers who say we should ban the export of coal. Take that further and we will be shutting down coal mines, closing power generation plants and outlawing carbon base fuels. This would then leave you in your grass hut, hunting and gathering, as you would be unemployed with no transport, communication or man-processed foods. Just like everyone else on the planet. At least we wouldn’t have Global Warming as defined by the Believers.

Then there are the moderates who believe that replacing your light bulbs with low-wattage bulbs will reverse the trend. Even if all of the 20 million people in Australia performed this task, we would be outweighed by the 231 million (July 2002) people of Indonesia, let alone the 1.2 billion (July 2002) people in China.

The Believers have been told that the IPCC summary is the consensus of 2500 scientists, 450 lead authors and 800 contributors with the result being a consensus of sound science. What has been omitted is that not all of the scientists are in agreement with the summary. Also, scientific research that does not agree with the summary is ignored, or worse still, the opposite view is given (Ross McKitrick – “What the U.N. won’t tell you”). This comes about because the end result is filtered by politicians and bureaucrats. To see the end result of analysis by scientists, look at the Oregon Petition which is a consensus of some 17,000 verified scientists. Going back to our medication, imagine a politician filtering your Doctor’s analysis; are you really going to take that medication now?

The Sceptics, on the other hand, are saying that there is not enough evidence to say that the planet’s climate is behaving outside the bounds of what has happened over the past millions of years, let alone man’s part in influencing climate change. Most of the internet discussion is on the specifics of what is right and wrong with the IPCC summary but the polarisation boils down to those two little words, “very likely”.

So how did this situation get so out of hand that the dying in Africa are put on the back burner while we throw billions at providing a solution to a problem that doesn’t need fixing? There is the premise that “we caused it, we can fix it”. We believe that this situation was bound to happen because of our decadent western lifestyle of forsaking nature. Now nature is getting even and only we can redeem ourselves (by cutting greenhouse emissions) to return to Eden. Consider this; the radiative process (by which we lose heat to space) only accounts for 25% of our heat dissipation (the other 75% is spread between convection and conduction) and the man-made greenhouse gases only account for 2% of all greenhouse gases (Global Warming: The Origin and Nature of the Alleged Scientific Consensus – Richard Lindzen). 98% of the greenhouse gases comprise water vapour and but since they aren’t man-made they are ignored in the process. Perhaps there are a few interactions going on that we don’t know about yet? After all, the planet has been looking after itself for millions of years (as well as several ice-ages), so maybe it knows something we don’t know?

Also that media has seen a good story and replayed all the sensational parts to scare the children, Politicians have been inundated with constituents who can’t sleep at night and want them to do something about it, and now we are at the stage where if you want publicity for a product, connect it with Climate Change. Al Gore is at it again with a Climate Concert covering half the globe. If he really believed his own movie, he would do it without electricity or transportation as those two will add tons of greenhouse gas emissions. The question is: where is the science behind all this? Politicians aren’t scientists and the media certainly aren’t. You, the reader, aren’t a scientist. Again it comes down to faith in what we are being told is correct.

There are just as many analysis of the IPCC summary that show it to be a hypothesis but not a scientific fact (IPCC Fourth Assessment Report 2007, Analysis and Summary – Christopher Monckton for one), but this point is not relayed by the media as strongly as the original summary. Where is the investigative journalism that gives us the other side’s point of view? My own research has made me question the information being constantly fed to the public by the media and has led to the following:

Fact: The Climate is changing and will always change.
Fact: The earth has been heating up since the last ice-age. It hasn’t been at steady x degrees per decade but it has been increasing.
Fact: We need to know more about the complexities of climate and our influence (as an inhabitant of earth) on climate, but also appreciate that there are some things we cannot control.
Fact: We, as inhabitants of this planet, should take more time to understand for ourselves at how a point of view is arrived. We seem to take the word of everyone else instead of making up our own mind.

So if you want to find a cause that will make your existence relevant, help the poor, the hungry and the disadvantaged. Do not take the funds that could help alleviate their suffering to placate your own fears as planted by people who are masters of the game. Also, do not expect everyone to change their lifestyle because of your point of view. Wouldn’t that make you a terrorist?

Regards
Roger Burke
Brisbane,
In Australia

PS

The main site for Michael Crichton’s speeches is here http://www.michaelcrichton.net/speeches/index.html and the one about “Environmentalism as religion” is here http://www.michaelcrichton.net/speeches/speeches_quote05.html .

There is also a great excerpt from his book ‘The State of Fear’ about Politicized Science called ‘Why Politicized Science is Dangerous’ (http://www.michaelcrichton.net/fear/index.html) that parallels the old theory of eugenics with that of climate change. It was his book (The State of Fear) that initially got me thinking that maybe we have been misled by the global warming hysteria.

Some other links I used:
‘A climate of alarm’ by Richard Lindzen in 2007 http://physicsweb.org/articles/world/20/2/2/1
‘Climate Change? Don’t believe it.’ by Christopher Monckton in 2006 http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2006/11/05/nosplit/nwarm05.xml (and a link to download his report)
‘Global Warming: The Origin and Nature of the Alleged Scientific Consensus’ by Richard Lindzen in 1992 http://www.cato.org/pubs/regulation/regv15n2/reg15n2g.html
‘What the U.N. Won’t Tell You’ by Ross McKitrick in 2007 http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/16948233/site/newsweek/

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Climate & Climate Change

Ouch! One Big Snake

March 3, 2007 By jennifer

Here’s one big snake caught on an electric fence in South Africa near the town of Nyngan, New South Wales, Australia.**

Snake_Nyngan_themouth1 compressed.JPG
Photo via Helen Mahar, correct identification thanks to Nexus

snake_nyngan_frmwest1 compressed.JPG
Ouch!

Someone had some fun suggesting this python was Australian and from Nyngan. While Nyngan doesn’t have any African rock pythons …

Nyngan and the struggle to contain invasive woody weeds on farmland was the focus of viagra a television program entitled ‘The Great Land-Clearing Myth’ which screened on ‘Sunday’ last August.

—————-
** Thanks to Nexus for setting us straight.

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: Plants and Animals

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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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