Electrification the best and fastest way to prevent global warming catastrophe

The rapid electrification of our homes, businesses and vehicles, powered by renewable energy, must be urgently pursued by the next federal Government as a new scientific paper reveals the world can still keep global warming below a catastrophic two degrees.

The scientific journal Nature has produced the first study to rigorously quantify the climate impact of emissions reduction pledges made before and during the global COP26 conference in November. It finds there is a 50 per cent chance of keeping warming below 1.9 or 2 degrees by the end of the century.

Research released last year by Rewiring Australia chief scientist, Dr Saul Griffith, demonstrated that rapid price reductions in already available technologies enables rapid decarbonisation of the domestic economy and that this would be more cost effective than other forms of carbon reduction, in fact financially positive for consumers over this decade.

Dr Griffith said no nation was better placed than Australia lead the way, through decarbonising the domestic economy by replacing fossil fuel powered cars, heating and stove tops with renewable powered, electric versions.

“Australia can lead the world in harnessing the power of the sun to run our homes and cars, smashing carbon emissions and obliterating energy bills at the same time,” Dr Griffith said.

“The national pledges made by Australia, America and other countries fail to factor in how the declining costs of EVs, solar, batteries and efficient household appliances can combined as a package that zeros energy emissions for households.

“Electrifying our homes and vehicles is the fastest and cheapest path to decarbonising our domestic economy. By 2030 it will save close to $5,000 per year per household on their energy bill and reduce domestic emissions by 40 per cent.

“This election is the perfect opportunity for a party or candidate to commit to electrification. The first step is to pilot the electrification of an entire suburb or street, where we replace all gas appliances and combustion engine vehicles with renewable powered electric versions.

An analysis released by the Australia Institute found that for the 2020-2021 financial year, different levels of Government provided more than $11.6 billion in fossil fuel subsidies.

“This is entirely counter-productive,” Dr Griffith said. “We are doling out subsidies to energy sources that are choking the planet while we leave proven technologies sitting on the bench. Subsidising fossil fuels also makes the world more unstable and dangerous, strengthening the hand of petro-states and oligarchs.

“Redirecting just a fraction of fossil fuel subsidies to households would allow them to rewire their homes and adopt the latest zero-emission technology while saving thousands every year on their energy bills.

“This should be a no-brainer.

JobSeeker call is brutal and unnecessary

The decision of both major parties not to lift JobSeeker is brutal and has relegated millions of Australians to continuing to live under the poverty line, said the St Vincent de Paul Society.

Yesterday, Labor confirmed it will go to the federal election with a policy that maintains the JobSeeker payment of just above $640 per fortnight for a single person without children – an identical position to that of the Coalition.

St Vincent de Paul Society National President Claire Victory said the decision was both cruel and unnecessary.

‘It is crushingly disappointing that voters at this election will not be able to choose a party of government that wants to lift Australia’s brutally low JobSeeker rate,’ Ms Victory said.

‘It is simply immoral for a nation as wealthy as Australia to allow millions of people to languish beneath the poverty line.

‘We’re constantly told that lifting the JobSeeker rate would act as a disincentive to work, but the research doesn’t bear that out and in my decades of engaging with people experiencing poverty I’m yet to find anyone who’s able to work but chooses to remain on JobSeeker. It’s clear that the current JobSeeker rate is actually designed to punish people.’

Ms Victory said while it was understandable that both parties were cautious about increasing national debt, there were ways to boost JobSeeker without impacting the budget bottom line.

Recent modelling by the ANU Centre for Social Research and Methods, commissioned by the St Vincent de Paul Society, found an increase to JobSeeker of $150 per fortnight, along with a 50 per cent increase to Commonwealth Rent Assistance, could be easily paid for through minor tax changes that would only marginally affect highest income-earners.

‘This research shows there is no justification for being so brutal with people who cannot find sufficient work. While acknowledging the need to be cautious about adding to national debt, there are many ways Australia could fund a boost to JobSeeker that lifts recipients out of poverty and restores their dignity, without affecting the budget bottom line.

‘There is abundant wealth in this country to fund an income increase to those who most desperately need it. The fact that neither party has the political courage to advocate for such a change is deeply disappointing.’

The St Vincent de Paul Society’s Federal Election statement includes a suite of practical and compassionate policies to create A Fairer Australia.

https://www.vinnies.org.au/page/News/National_Media_Releases/National_media_releases_2022/A_Fairer_Australia–federal_election_statement_2022/

Plato’s Cave: Stalagmites reveal Australia’s pre-colonial bushfire history

Like Plato’s Cave, where fires reveal the portrait of an otherwise hidden reality, researchers have for the first time used a stalagmite’s chemical signal to reveal the nature of Australia’s historic wildfires, identifying differences before and after European settlement.

“For around 50 years, researchers have focused on the climate record contained in cave stalagmites,” says Prof Andy Baker, project chief investigator from UNSW’s School of Biological, Earth and Environmental Sciences. “However, hiding in the shadows all along was this geochemical record of past fires.”

The stalagmite used in the study, findings of which are published in the journal Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta, was extracted from Yonderup cave in Western Australia and preserved a record of fires, climate conditions and the intervening years since its formation, allowing researchers to link local fires with any climatic antecedents.

“We found that the largest fire event in the [stalagmite] record, in approximately 1897, coincided with a decades-long drought period known as the Australian Federation drought,” says Dr Liza McDonough from ANSTO and lead author of the study, conducted with UNSW and other universities. “The intensity of this fire was likely caused, at least partially, by these dry conditions.

“We also know that this [the largest fire] occurred a few decades after Indigenous cultural burning would have been suppressed by Europeans, so the fire was also probably exacerbated by a build-up of understorey vegetation and dry combustible material on the forest floor due to removal of Indigenous land management practices.”

The researchers interpret the pre-European period captured in the stalagmite record as characterised by regular, low-intensity fires, while its post-European record depicts infrequent, high-intensity fires, which they speculate could be due to management practices.

This is the first study in which a stalagmite’s geochemistry has been used to describe historical fires. The technique relies upon the stalagmite’s composition, the variation in its elements and the order in which they were laid down.

“Nutrients such as phosphorus, and trace metals are found in bushfire ash and, in theory, can dissolve into waters that eventually infiltrate underground caves. Our research provides the first evidence that water containing high concentrations of these dissolved ash-derived elements can also alter the chemistry of a stalagmite and result in the preservation of signals from past fire events,” says Dr McDonough.

Why had stalagmites not been previously discovered as archives of past fires? “We realised we needed to use the highest resolution geochemical techniques available, as stalagmites grow very slowly. In one year, a stalagmite increases in height by the same thickness as that of a sheet of paper. The geochemical trace left by a fire would be even thinner.”

It’s not just historical fires that are recorded in stalagmites but also the annual accumulation of years, much like tree rings.

“In regions with high seasonality,” Dr McDonough says, describing the stalagmite’s record of time, “wet winters can lead to a flush of organic matter into the dripwaters that form stalagmites. This causes annual dark bands alternating with light calcite bands in summer. This means that these stalagmites can be easily and precisely dated by counting back the annual layers.”

While the particular portion of stalagmite used in this study is relatively young, allowing scientists to peer back just 260 years, the range of time promised by other stalagmites and other speleothems (cave ornaments) stretches back much further, thousands or even tens of thousands of years.

This new technique opens the possibility of speleothems, and their chemical record, to describe historical fire and climatic events around the world “potentially anywhere we might find caves”.

Dr McDonough says the technique also grants new perspectives on climate change. “Speleothems record increasing or decreasing rainfall rates and changes in evaporation and their potential influence on local fire events, whether they’re becoming more or less frequent through time.

“Further investigation of the combined climate and fire records captured in stalagmites will allow us to understand the climatic conditions required for large bushfires to occur, which is essential to properly prepare for and mitigate the impacts of large fire events.”

The authors would like to respectfully acknowledge the Whadjuk Noongar people, the traditional custodians of the land at Yanchep where this study was conducted, for whom the land has strong mythological, ritual and ceremonial significance.

EASTER AIRPORT CHAOS PREDICTABLE AND AVOIDABLE BUT SECTOR NEEDS GOVT-LED REFORM PLAN: TWU

Chaos at Australia’s airports as they struggle to return to peak service demands a national aviation recovery plan to fix the sector’s overwhelmed and underpaid anaemic workforce, says the Transport Workers Union.

Aviation has suffered a mass exodus of skilled workers after the Morrison government failed to provide JobKeeper to swathes of the aviation sector and turned a blind eye to the illegal outsourcing of 2000 workers by Qantas.

Without a national recovery plan, the industry remains exposed to external shocks like COVID-19 variants, exorbitant fuel costs, natural disasters and international unrest. Reform is urgently needed to stop the cycle of airports and airlines profiteering and stuffing executive pay packets when times are good and then going cap in hand to governments when external shocks hit.

Since the start of the pandemic, the TWU has been calling for a national plan for aviation to support workers and airlines through COVID, and rebuild aviation fairly as hard borders came down. Specifically, the TWU wants to see a Safe and Secure Skies Commission put in place to lift standards at the airport and end spiralling underemployment, with stressed out workers doing the same jobs on vastly different rates and conditions, jeopardising safety.

“Australians can thank Scott Morrison and his absent government for being stuck at airports rather than doing Easter egg hunts with kids,” said Michael Kaine, TWU national secretary.

“For more than two years, the Morrison government gave away billions of taxpayer dollars to airlines with no string attached, while failing to prevent the forced exodus of workers from the aviation sector.

“Staffing shortages were entirely predictable – the sector was hit hard by the pandemic but failures by the Morrison government to insulate the workforce have exacerbated the challenges. The Morrison government failed to secure the aviation workforce by denying workers employed by international companies JobKeeper. They’ve left the sector and don’t want to return to casual low paid work with poor conditions.

“Under the Morrison Government Aviation has become a highly outsourced sector, which means casual workers paid less for doing the same job as directly employed workers. Many of these international companies that are outsourced to, such as Dnata and SNP Security, didn’t get JobKeeper. Unsupported workers left the sector entirely and now don’t want to come back to casual, low-paid jobs with bad conditions.

“Workers deserve a national plan which puts them at the centre of rebuilding aviation. To do that, workers need a Commission with powers to lift standards throughout aviation and protect secure jobs. Complimenting a Commission must be funded programs to support workers retrain and reconnect to the jobs they lost during the pandemic, and targeted spending to reduce COVID risks and maintain public confidence in air travel.”

In July 2021, the Federal Court found Qantas illegally outsourced its ground crew to prevent them bargaining and taking industrial action. There are 2000 workers who are waiting to be reinstated by Qantas after being illegally sacked, but the airline refuses.

“Qantas pocketed $865 million in JobKeeper and at the same time illegally outsourced its entire ground operations. Now the airline doesn’t have enough customer service workers, baggage handlers or ground staff to respond to surging demand.”

Australian Youth Job Guarantee needed to repair pandemic devastation: new report

Australia should follow the European example and introduce a Youth Job Guarantee, according to a new report from the Australia Institute which reveals the true extent of youth employment devastation during the pandemic.

Despite representing just 14 per cent of workers, the new report, ‘Youth unemployment and the pandemic’, shows young people (aged 15-24) bore 39 per cent of the job losses in the 2020 lockdowns and a staggering 55 per cent of job losses in 2021.

The report also finds that while young people were twice as likely to lose their job in the pandemic, stimulus spending was disproportionally directed toward industries with minimal youth employment, including $2.7 billion to the aviation sector, $780 million to the Homebuilder grants program, and $2.9 billion to the “gas-fired recovery.”

“We’ve heard a lot this week about the headline unemployment rate of four per cent, but virtually nothing about youth unemployment which has now risen to 9.3 per cent,” said Eliza Littleton, research economist at the Australia Institute.

“It’s small wonder youth unemployment is so high when you consider how hard the jobs of young people were hammered during the pandemic and how little support they received. For example, our research shows hospitality and retail make up 42 per cent of youth employment, but received just 18 per cent of JobKeeper payments.

“Even the young people who can find work now are increasingly being required to sign up to casual or ‘gig’ based jobs that offer no sick leave, paid leave, or other entitlements.

“If we want to turn this around, we need real youth employment policies, like those we see in Japan, Germany, and Israel. Our research shows that in those nations, youth unemployment only rose during the pandemic between 1.5 per cent and 1.9 per cent. Countries with less supportive policies like the United States, Ireland, and Australia experienced increases of between 4.5 per cent and 12.4 per cent.

“Youth employment policy in Australia focuses too much on resume writing and not enough on creating more jobs.

“A Youth Job Guarantee would ensure that every young person who registered as unemployed gets access to either a job, a paid internship, or a training opportunity. The precedent has been set in a number of European countries. It would require the Australian government to fund private sector job creation and public sector graduate programs, alongside better, de-privatised employment services.

“It’s time to stop thinking of unemployed young people as a cost and start seeing them as a lost opportunity. If the 249,000 young people who want to work could be productively employed, they would earned $7.1 billion per year and increase GDP by $13.7 billion,” Ms Littleton said.

The new report was commissioned by Youth Action, the peak advocacy organisation representing young people and youth services in NSW, and draws on extensive consultation sessions with a diverse range of young people.

“This report highlights that young people in NSW bore the brunt of job losses, with Western Sydney and Regional NSW the hardest hit,” said Kate Munro, CEO of Youth Action.

“The pandemic has amplified pre-existing problems in the labour market for young people – there aren’t enough jobs and what jobs there are come with very little security.

“There are plenty of options for government to act. We need job guarantees, protections for casual workers, increasing income support, and better resourcing for public employment services providers.

“Young people are way overrepresented in the casual economy where they have fewer rights. If this remains the case they will continue to bear the brunt of economic downturns,” Ms Munro said.

AN ASPIRATIONAL PLAN TO FIX THE DENTAL SYSTEM

The Australian Dental Association has congratulated the Greens for addressing the seismic inadequacy in our dental health system.

But it says that Adam Bandt’s dental pitch which will cost $8 bn a year or $77bn over a decade to provide Medicare funded dental services, will be a challenge for any government to implement.

“While we applaud the Greens for addressing this enormous problem,” said Dr Mark Hutton, ADA President, “what’s important and financially more palatable for either election-winning party, as a first step, is to address the oral health travesties within the aged care system.

“You only have to look at the pictures attached to this release to understand this massive problem – they are typical of the issues we know go on in aged care homes.

“Dentures left in for weeks, teeth not cleaned for days and sometimes weeks, broken teeth lacerating gums and tongues, extensive tooth decay, advanced gum disease fast-tracking the person to potentially fatal aspirational pneumonia, fillings falling out, pain, swelling and oral cancers in all stages.

“It’s a horrific roll call of neglect. What if this was your mum or dad? Wouldn’t you want something done? This is the nation’s mums, dads, granddads and grandmums all lying there suffering pain, neglect, disease, trauma – and the current government is ignoring the issue, hoping it will go away.”

With its ‘Stop The Rot’ campaign, the ADA is urging the major parties to urgently adopt as part of their election promises and post-election health strategies these measures which will go a long way to fixing the immediate problems.

Here are the facts:

The Royal Commission into Residential Aged Care heard evidence of the appalling state of dental and oral health in Australia’s residential aged care facilities.

There are nearly 190,000 of Australia’s most vulnerable people living in residential care. Many are suffering due to poor dental and oral health and a lack of access to appropriate services.

More follows….

The recommendations from the Royal Commission’s report have been ignored.

Residents in aged care cannot access appropriate dental and oral care through the public dental system because it is patently underfunded.

The ADA is demanding all parties to ‘Stop The Rot’ by committing to three policy outcomes:

  1. To fund direct access to public and private dental services that maintain the basic dental and oral healthcare standards in aged care facilities
  2. To deliver a training package to ensure that staff in aged care services are skilled to be able to care for residents daily oral health needs and to identify when dental services are required
  3. To include an oral health assessment in the over 75 health check performed by GPs.

“These policy outcomes are crucial for the health and well-being of residents in aged care but are immaterial in budgetary terms,” said Mark Hutton.

“We hope the main parties realise what needs to be done and adopt our recommendations in their pre and post-election health strategies. After all, they will all be old one day too.”

Did you know:

-1 in 4 over 75s have teeth affected by decay,

  • 1 in 3 aged 55-74 have untreated tooth decay and 1 in 4 in those aged over 75,

-1 in 2 aged 55-74 years have periodontal or gum disease, rising to over 2 in 6 in the over 75s

-1 in 5 over 75 have complete tooth loss.

31 councils will be getting their Scrap Together

Two sets of grants totalling more than $2.8 million across 30 council areas will be a boon for recycling food waste right across NSW.

The first set of grants totalling $240,150 are part of the NSW Environment Protection Authority’s (EPA) Scrap Together FOGO education campaign, which will see residents in 25 local council areas armed with the knowledge to become even better food waste recyclers.

The second set of FOGO grants totalling $2.6 million will give residents of six council areas access to organics waste recycling.

Head of EPA Organics Amanda Kane said the projects built on a multi-million-dollar investment in kerbside food waste recycling that first started in 2013.

“The NSW Government leads the way when it comes to food waste recycling, thanks to the strong support from many NSW councils that already offer food organics and garden organics (FOGO) services to their residents.

“The new Scrap Together grants, rolling out across 25 council areas, will remind households of the environmental benefits of turning food waste into compost. If past results are anything to go by, the educational campaigns will increase recycling of food waste while reducing what goes into landfill.

“Food waste sent to landfill in the red lid bin rots, generating greenhouse gas emissions, whereas in the green lid bin it gets processed into beneficial compost and returned back to the land.”

Ms Kane said a further six councils will receive a share of $2.6 million through the Organics Collections grants program, which means they will be able to introduce FOGO services or trial food-only services in multi-unit dwellings.

“These grants are the latest in the NSW Government’s investment to transform organics recovery in NSW. They include funding for regional councils like Hay Shire Council and Kyogle, as well as metropolitan councils like Bayside and Canada Bay in Sydney.”

Across NSW, the Organics Collections grant funding helps recover more than 200,000 tonnes of food and garden waste each year and reduces CO2 -e emissions by 350,000 tonnes a year.

The Organics Collections grants are delivered via a partnership between the EPA and the NSW Environmental Trust. They provide up to $1.3 million per grant for infrastructure like bins and kitchen caddies to help transition to the new services.

Meanwhile, the Scrap Together grants provide $10,000 for each council to deliver EPA-designed content, including videos, radio ads, mailbox drops and print advertising.

But these grants are just the beginning of a campaign to reduce food waste from entering landfill.

Ms Kane said the NSW Government had allocated an additional $69 million over the next five years to further expand FOGO services and support councils to meet new requirements under the Government’s Waste and Sustainable Materials Strategy 2041, which aims to provide FOGO services to all NSW households by 2030.

For more information and links to detailed program summaries, visit www.epa.nsw.gov.au/fogo

The successful Scrap Together projects are:

Council name
Amount
Comments

Dubbo Regional Council
$30,000
Includes Mid-Western Regional and Narromine Shire Councils

Kempsey Shire Council
$10,000

Wagga Wagga City Council
$10,000

Shellharbour City Council
$9,650

North East Waste
$50,500
Includes Byron Shire, Ballina Shire, Lismore City, Richmond Valley, Clarence Valley and Tweed Shire Councils.

Canberra Regional Joint Organisation
$50,000
Includes Bega Valley Shire, Goulburn Mulwaree Snowy Monaro Regional, Snowy Valley Shire and Queanbeyan Palerang Regional Councils

Lake Macquarie City Council
$10,000

Penrith City Council
$10,000

Kiama Municipal Council
$10,000

Broken Hill City Council
$10,000

NetWaste
$40,000
Includes Parkes and Forbes Shire Councils and Bathurst and Orange Regional Councils

The successful Organics Collections grants are:

Council name
Amount
Project title

Hay Shire Council
$106,102
Hay Shire Council FOGO Collection Program

Port Macquarie Hastings
$25,000
CSU Organics Recovery Project

Canada Bay Council
$235,626
The Rhodes to FOGO: FOGO Trial in MUDs

Penrith City Council
$521,824
Penrith MUDS FOGO implementation and trial

Bayside Council
$1,255,768
Bayside Council Organics Collections Harmonisation

Kyogle Shire Council
$503,324
Kyogle Council FOGO Collection

$6bn for oil subsidies, $0 for EV subsidies: Morrison’s priorities speak volumes 

The Australian electric vehicle sector is dismayed by Scott Morrison’s announcement of yet another taxpayer subsidy for oil, while the EV industry remains ignored.

The Prime Minster today announced two federal government grants of $125 million will go to Australia’s two oil refineries. The announcement comes off the back a $2.4bn oil refinery package in May 2021, and a fuel excise cut of around $3bn.

Meanwhile the federal government has announced no competent plan or strategy for the electric vehicle sector.

“Australia is capable of producing abundant clean electricity and that electricity could be powering our trucks and cars. But we have a Prime Minister who’s more interested in subsiding foreign oil and that’s tragic,” said Electric Vehicle Council chief executive Behyad Jafari.

“It’s incredible that an Australian Government in 2022 could be spending six billion dollars propping up oil, while not even bothering to construct a competent plan for the electrification of Australia’s fleet.

“Everyone now knows that the future of Australian transport is electric. We should be doing everything possible to rapidly electrify not just consumer vehicles, but trucks and commercial fleets.

“But instead of moving us toward the future, the Morrison Government is choosing to spend six billion dollars in taxpayer money on propping up the failing oil industry. It’s frankly dismaying for everyone who understands where the world is headed.

“If the EV industry was allocated even a fraction of the money spent on oil subsidies we could be cleaning our city air, lowering our carbon emissions, and breaking our dependence on foreign oil.”

Greens Commit to Making Telehealth Permanent 

The Australian Greens have today recommitted to their plan to make telehealth a permanent feature of our healthcare system.

If the Greens enter a balance of power arrangement after the election, they will push to invest $772 million over the forward estimates into expanding and strengthening telehealth services.

The wide availability of telehealth since early 2020 has revolutionised the way we do healthcare in Australia. Access to healthcare on the phone or via Zoom provides patients with much-needed flexibility and accessibility, which improves health outcomes for everyone.

The Greens have previously announced their plan to make mental health part of medicare. The plan would make mental health care free, and universally accessible with an unlimited number of appointments. The plan will be funded by taxing billionaires and big corporations making big profits.

Greens spokesperson on Health and Mental Health Senator Jordon Steele-John said: 

“Telehealth has been invaluable to our community. It has enabled people to access health services during lockdowns, it has closed the access gap for people living in regional and remote areas, and has allowed disabled people and older people to access support from the safety of their homes.

“So many people have told me that accessing telehealth has meant they haven’t had to miss a whole day of work or study just to have a 15-minute appointment with their GP.

“We must ensure that we are building a health system that meets the needs of our community into the future.

“The Australian Greens are committed to making telehealth a permanent feature of our Medicare system. 

“The Australian Greens want everyone who needs health care to easily access it. Today’s announcement to make telehealth permanent builds on our commitment to clear public hospital surgery waiting lists, and get dental health care and mental health care included in Medicare.”

Labor Will Restore Regional Mental Telehealth Services

An Albanese Labor Government will restore affordable telehealth psychiatric consultations for people living in regional and rural Australia, reversing Scott Morrison’s damaging Medicare cut.
 
In December 2021, the Morrison Government ended the ability for Australians in rural and regional areas to access bulk billed psychiatry consultations through telehealth.
 
This cut has seriously curtailed the access of people in rural and regional Australia to vital mental health services, and came at the height of the Omicron wave of the COVID pandemic.
 
This cut has impacted patients in regional areas throughout Australia.
 
It has resulted in significant gap fees for psychiatric consultations delivered through videoconferencing to patients living in the regions. It has also seen some psychiatrists withdrawing these services altogether.
 
Scott Morrison’s cuts to Medicare bulk billing for psychiatric telehealth shows how his policies are hurting people in regional and rural Australia.
 
By contrast, Labor understands the importance of mental health care for Australians, regardless of where they live.
 
We will restore a 50 per cent regional loading to telehealth psychiatric consultations, meaning people in the regions will once again be able to have affordable bulk billed telehealth mental health consultations.
 
Reinstating Medicare support for telehealth mental health consultations is expected to support 450,000 consultations over 4 years, 585,000 consultations over 5 years, 1.426 million consultations over ten years.
 
This investment in strengthening Medicare will cost $31.3 million over the forward estimates.
 
Labor built Medicare – and only an Albanese Labor Government will strengthen Medicare, by making it easier to see a doctor.
 

Anthony Albanese said:

“Scott Morrison’s cuts to regional mental health consultations during a pandemic which has seen people struggling with mental health issues are unconscionable.
 
“Labor will restore these vital mental health services, making them affordable and accessible to people wherever they live.”