Oct 122013
 

ABCOriginal story at ABC News

Federal Agriculture Minister Barnaby Joyce says the Top End can increase its irrigated farming output without having to dam more tropical rivers.

Mr Joyce is in Darwin to open an Australian Bureau of Agricultural and Resource Economics and Sciences (ABARES) regional summit today.

Ord River West Bank Posted Thu 10 Oct 2013, 12:28pm AEDT  Federal Agriculture Minister Barnaby Joyce says the Territory can create more irrigated croplands after the expansion of the Ord River project from Western Australia. Photo: Tyne McConnon

Ord River West Bank Posted Thu 10 Oct 2013, 12:28pm AEDT Federal Agriculture Minister Barnaby Joyce says the Territory can create more irrigated croplands after the expansion of the Ord River project from Western Australia. Photo: Tyne McConnon

He says the Territory can create more irrigated croplands, with the expansion of the Ord River project from Western Australia into the Northern Territory and using water from the aquifers in the Katherine region, about 300 kilometres south of Darwin.

The minister told ABC local radio in Darwin that the focus would likely be more on aquifers, rather than damming rivers such as the Daly and the Roper.

"We are more inclined to look towards the areas where there is potential for expansion," he said.

The Territory agricultural community will be able to voice their concerns at the summit.

ABARES chief commodity analyst Jammie Penm says the conference will include participants from all farming sectors, the Tiwi Land Council and the weather bureau.

He says the conference is about better understanding the needs, challenges and opportunities in regional Australia.

"[We will] discuss a number of issues, including Asian markets and maybe and abattoir for the regions, the possibility of expanding export performances," he said.

Mr Penm says information will be channelled into research and development in support of rural exports.

He says it is important the northern Australia gets a say.

"Our role in Canberra is not to lord over other people"

Barnaby Joyce, Federal Agriculture Minister

The ABARES conference in Darwin is one of seven one-day regional outlook summits being held around the nation.

Meanwhile, Mr Joyce says he won't stand in the way of Indonesian plans to buy two cattle property leases in the Territory.

He says the Northern Territory Cattlemen's Association has lobbied hard for the sale to go ahead, and he will not interfere.

"Our role in Canberra is not to lord over other people," he said.

"If this is what Territorians want, if this is the direction that they wish to go, then it is my job to support it.

"It is leasehold country, in any case.

"You are not buying anything and you have got to deal with all the requirements of leasehold country that other people are dealing with."

However, Mr Joyce said he had not changed his views on all foreign investments in Australian agricultural land and enterprises.

"When I have a major concern about an issue such as GrainCorp, they say, 'well you don't believe in foreign investment'," he said.

"And when I say well I am at ease with the sale of a couple of leases to Indonesian interests, they say you have deserted your philosophies and you are a hypocrite.

"I don't know how you win."

Mr Joyce also said the Territory would need to rely on private capital, not government funds, for much of its infrastructure development.

He told the conference that his plans for northern Australia were realistic, not poetic, and predicted Darwin could become a more dominant Australian city than Adelaide.

Oct 082013
 

Murray's critically endangered listing worries irrigatorsOriginal story at ABC News

Murray listing worries irrigators

Murray listing worries irrigators

The National Irrigators Council is urging decisive action to stop part of the Murray having a "critically endangered" status.

The stretch of river from Wentworth in New South Wales to the Murray mouth, south of Adelaide, was listed under the Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act back in August, a day before the federal election campaign began.

The listing means any development along the river could require federal approval.

Irrigators Council chief executive Tom Chesson said that could mean more red tape for river communities and discourage development.

"As fishermen, as campers, as people who use the houseboats, we're concerned that it will impact everyone," he said.

"If you wanted to go and build a new road or a new subdivision that potentially could trigger this."

The Federal Government has 15 parliamentary sitting days to disallow the motion.

Mr Chesson is urging state governments to do more to ensure the endangered listing is reversed.

Sep 252013
 

The ConversationOriginal story by Liz Minchin, The Conversation and James Whitmore, The Conversation

Former Chief Climate Commissioner Tim Flannery with a solar array at the University of Queensland’s St Lucia campus in 2011. Photo: Dave Hunt, AAP

Former Chief Climate Commissioner Tim Flannery with a solar array at the University of Queensland’s St Lucia campus in 2011. Photo: Dave Hunt, AAP

The newly-formed Climate Council has been swamped with A$160,000 in donations and so many followers that its Twitter account has been repeatedly suspended.

But experts warn that concerns about its independence may dog the new body, which will replace the Climate Commission, set up by the Gillard government and axed by the Coalition last Thursday, in its first week in power.

The news broke on social media last night that all of the former Climate Commissioners – including conservationist Professor Tim Flannery, climate expert Professor Will Steffen and former president of BP Australasia – would work for free to set up a new crowdfunded organisation to provide clear public advice on climate science.

Having crowdfunded A$160,000 from 5,400 founding donors between midnight last night and around 1pm today, the new council is now aiming to raise A$500,000 by the end of the week.

It has also put out an appeal for people with scientific research and report writing, design, photography and crowdfunding experience.

“No one’s really done this before”

Following the Climate Council’s launch in Sydney, Professor Flannery told The Conversation that the former Climate Commission “received a tidal wave of support saying how valuable our work was and how people would like us to continue”.

“We decided we were doing exactly what we wanted to do in the future and that we would continue doing it but under a different vehicle.”

He said the council hoped to keep building on the past two and a half years' work in which the commission produced 27 reports, met with more than 20,000 people face-to-face and engaged online.

“We’re apolitical. We do not and never have offered advice to government. We’ll brief government on our reports but we don’t offer advice and we don’t do analysis of government. There’s no other organisation I can see in Australia that’s really filling that role. There are advocacy groups that overlap with us, but these are not quite the same.”

Asked about how the council would maintain its independence while seeking donations from people concerned about climate change – opening it up to accusations of being just another lobby group – Professor Flannery conceded “no one has really done this before”.

“We hope to continue using public donations, but we need to invent a new method.

“Our common resolve is that the second that anyone asks us to do anything or say anything they will get their money back. Independence is central to our credibility. We shall see as we go along what mechanisms are required.”

Transparency concerns

But Deakin University’s Chair of Media and Communication Deb Verhoeven said that by rushing its launch and seeking donations through its own website, the Climate Council was taking a risk with its reputation.

“Crowdfunding can protect you from accusations of bias by using a crowdfunding platform, which provides an arm’s length relationship between the donor and the recipient,” Professor Verhoeven said.

“By going directly there’s not that same level of transparency. That worries me because the Climate Council has been set up as an organisation that was meant to counter accusations of bias in climate science – it’s meant to be authoritative and independent. By not having a transparent funding mechanism they open themselves up to accusations of bias.”

Professor Verhoeven, who recently shared tips from being part of a successful research crowdfunding project Research My World, said crowdfunding was a “fantastic option” for the council. But in order to be seen as an independent body, she suggested the council would be better to go through a popular crowdfunding platform such as kickstarter.com or pozible.com.

“The recipient and the donor don’t have a direct relationship. You can say you’re not prepared to accept donations from a particular type of organisation, and they will be filtered out. You can ask people to identify themselves, or choose anonymity. If they’re choosing anonymity the funding seekers can’t be accused of creating pressure, because the donors are anonymous.”

Apolitical, or another voice from the left?

Asked on Lateline last night about the resurrection of the formerly taxpayer-funded commission as not-for-profit body, Environment Minister Greg Hunt said:

“Look I wish them good luck. Tim Flannery rang me earlier this evening just to let me know that they were continuing on, on a voluntary basis. And I said, ‘That’s the great thing about democracy. It’s a free country and it proves our point that the commission didn’t have to be a taxpayer-funded body’. There is perfect freedom for people to continue to do this.”

Mr Hunt said the Abbott government would primarily take its independent scientific advice from the Bureau of Meteorology.

Tony Wood, the director of the Grattan Institute’s Energy Program, said it was too early to know how apolitical the new council would be, but he suspected that many people would have already made up their minds about it.

“There’s no doubt in my mind that the Coalition government will treat the Climate Council’s material as less than independent,” Mr Wood said. “But until we’ve seen the nature of the material the Council puts out it will be difficult to make that assessment.

“Much like the new government’s position on climate change can be perceived as a step to the right, the fact that the Climate Commission has become the Climate Council will be perceived, at least by the current government, as a step to the left. They will therefore discount the value of their work.”

How the story unfolded: scroll below to see how news of the Climate Council’s launch spread on social media from this afternoon back to late last night.

The Conversation

This article was originally published at The Conversation.
Read the original article.

Sep 242013
 

Original story by Brian Williams, the Courier Mail

BRISBANE City Council has raised doubts about the Port of Brisbane's controversial proposal to fill in a lake teeming with wildlife to build a car park.

The council has complained about how the port proposes to address the loss of biodiversity if the man-made wetland is bulldozed.

The Port of Brisbane's move to fill in a lake teeming with birds so it can be used as a car park for imported vehicles has been questioned by the city council. Photo: Tim Marsden, News Limited

The Port of Brisbane's move to fill in a lake teeming with birds so it can be used as a car park for imported vehicles has been questioned by the city council. Photo: Tim Marsden, News Limited

Dubbed Swan Lake by birdwatchers, the wetland was built 14 years ago as open space and to handle run-off as the port expanded along the foreshore.

Despite intense development in the region, it has become heavily populated with birds and is one of the most important wetlands for black swans.

Cramped for space, the port now wants to fill in Swan Lake to make way for 20,000 to 30,000 imported cars which are parked at the port.

Queensland Conservation chairman Simon Baltais said if the Government approved the development it would set a precedent in which all environmental offsets offered by industry as a trade-off to land clearing would become worthless.

"They promise you something one day, then take it away the next,'' Mr Baltais said.

This would produce an impossible situation where all sorts of projects including major mines and ports for which environmental offsets were proposed would become worthless.

"Communities put a lot of trust in industry when they offer environmental offsets,'' he said.

"Communities oppose developments but are told if they let a development go ahead, the environmental offsets will make up for it. How could you trust them after this?''

A spokesman for Deputy Premier Jeff Seeney said the Government could approve the project it if it was satisfied the council had no substantial objection.

"The council has expressed concern regarding the retention pond and adjacent wetlands," he said. "The department is awaiting formal advice from the port regarding the outcome of discussions to resolve these concerns."

Council planning and development assessment chairman Amanda Cooper said the Government could approve the development regardless of the council's opinion.

"Council has raised concerns regarding the way in which impacts relating to the loss of biodiversity values of the retention pond and adjacent wetlands have been addressed," Cr Cooper said.

"It is council's view that the port undertake further consultation with respect to measures to offset the impacts of filling the pond and associated wetlands."

A port spokesman said a deal had been signed with Landcare to offset the loss of the lake by delivering four projects over five years with a value of more than $250,000.

The projects included work such as weed clean-up, revegetation and landscaping at the Minnippi Parklands, the Lindum Sandy Camp Rd freshwater wetland, Wynnum North roadside areas and Bayside Parklands.

Seven conservation and animal rights groups, including the RSPCA have formed an alliance to fight the port's proposal.

More than 150 species use the lake which is carrying more than 1000 birds.

Sep 242013
 

Media Release from AFMA

Today, the Australian Fisheries Management Authority (AFMA) executed sixteen search warrants in and around Greenwell Point on the NSW South Coast. The action was taken with the help of the NSW Department of Primary Industries and New South Wales Police Force, Marine Area Command officers.
Senior Fisheries Officer McNaughton conducting a fish receiver inspection in Eden, New South Wales.

Senior Fisheries Officer McNaughton conducting a fish receiver inspection in Eden, New South Wales.

Thirty-seven officers searched businesses, residences, vehicles and several vessels to collect evidence against suspected illegal fishing.

AFMA General Manager of Fisheries Operations, Peter Venslovas, said that AFMA takes illegal fishing very seriously and operations like this one will continue into the future.

“People involved in quota evasion are really just stealing from the Australian community. They threaten the future seafood supply and the viability of recreational and commercial fisheries” Mr Venslovas said.

“Quota evasion undermines the sustainability of fish stocks and the livelihood and enjoyment of those fishers doing the right thing.”

This action follows the recent convictions of three skippers for failing to comply with fishing closures and breaching catch limits imposed by AFMA.

On 6 September 2013, the skippers from two boats operating out of South Australia were found guilty of fishing in closed areas and were ordered to pay fines, forfeiture of catch and compensation totaling $30,974.

On 13 September 2013, another skipper appeared before the Hobart Magistrates Court in relation to a separate matter in which he pleaded guilty to breaching catch limits on shark and was fined $6,000.

Mr Venslovas said that the convictions reflected the seriousness of the crimes.

“Closures are put in place to protect our natural fish stocks and to minimise impacts on Threatened, Endangered and Protected species. Non-compliance with rules and regulations can significantly impact future fish stocks and the marine environment”.

Fishers found guilty of fishing illegally or selling black-market fish may face jail terms of up to 10 years and fines of up to $42,500 for individuals and $212,500 for a company.

Know where your fish comes from! If you suspect illegal fishing or black-market fish supply to be occurring in your area please contact 1800 CRIMFISH (1800 274 634).

If you enjoyed this post, make sure you subscribe to AFMA RSS feeds.

 

Sep 242013
 

Original story by David Suzuki, University of British Columbia at The Conversation

Despite the enormous success of the environmental movement in the 1960s and 70s, we have fundamentally failed to use each of those battles to broaden the public understanding of why we were battling. It wasn’t just the power of environmentalists against developers, environmentalists against the oil industry. It was because we had a different way of looking at the world.

How can we make truly informed decisions if the scientific community itself is shut down? Photo:Dean Lewins/AAP

How can we make truly informed decisions if the scientific community itself is shut down? Photo:Dean Lewins/AAP

Environmentalism is a way of seeing our place within the biosphere. That’s what the battles were fought over. But we have failed to shift the perspective; or in the popular jargon, we failed to move or shift the paradigm. We are still stuck in the old way of seeing things.

I come to many of the politicians and corporate executives that environmentalists have been fighting all these years. They are driven by a totally different set of values, by the drive for profit, for growth, and for power. In that drive, they fail to see the bigger picture that environmentalism informs us about.

Look at the largest corporations like Apple, Walmart, Shell, Exxon, Monsanto – they are bigger and richer than most governments. And we treat them as if they are people. They are corporations, they’re not people. Why do we allow them to fund politicians, for God’s sake? They’re not people.

Politicians are running to look out for our future. But because corporations have the wealth to fund to a massive amount, after an election, guess who gets in the door to talk to the ministers and the elected representatives? It’s corporations. What we find is that governments now are being driven by a corporate agenda, which is not about our wellbeing and our happiness and our future.

Politicians today have very few tools with which to shape behaviour in society. One of the tools they do have is regulation. You set targets and you pass laws mandating them. And of course they are hated and fought tooth and nail by corporations – largely successfully.

Another tool they have – an enormous tool — is taxation. Taxation can be used to tax the things that we don’t want and pull the taxes off the things that we do want to be encouraged. We know that taxes work as a way of changing human behaviour. The carbon tax — putting a price on carbon — is by far the most effective way to begin to get corporations, to get companies, to get people to reduce their carbon footprint.

Your new Prime Minister ran on a promise to eliminate the carbon tax. I have no doubt he is going to do that, and will probably make this politically toxic now for at least a decade before it will be able to come back on the agenda. And this, of course, is just what corporations have wanted. But it works.

In Canada, we have the same kinds of arguments. We argue: oh, we’re a northern country; if we try to begin to reduce our carbon footprint it will destroy the economy. But we don’t look at what’s happening in a country very much like Canada – Sweden – a northern country which imposed a carbon tax in 1992.

They now pay $140 a ton to put carbon in the atmosphere. They’ve reduced their carbon emissions by 8% below 1990 levels, which is beyond the Kyoto target, and during that interval, their economy grew by more than 40%. So all this argument that we can’t afford to put a price on carbon – it will destroy the economy – is just what the corporations want believed and said.

There is in Canada a legal category where people can be sued and thrown in the slammer, called wilful blindness. If people in positions of power deliberately suppress or ignore information that is vital to the decisions they’re making, that is wilful blindness. I call it more than wilful blindness. I call it criminal negligence because it’s a crime against future generations, to avoid facing the reality.

That is what Mr Abbott is doing, by cancelling the (Climate) Commission, by firing Tim Flannery. It is criminal negligence through wilful blindness.

In my country we have a government that, I am ashamed to say, is even more intensely on this path because it has been in power longer than Mr Abbott. Stephen Harper, our Prime Minister, was a big admirer of John Howard and of George Bush, and he has cancelled virtually all research going on in Canada on climate change.

He has muzzled government scientists: they are not allowed to speak out in the public, even in areas in which they are expert, unless they are first vetted by the Prime Minister’s office. Scientific papers must go through the Prime Minister’s office before they are allowed to be submitted for publication. So we’re now getting science being moulded to fit a political, ideological agenda. He is laying off scientists in sectors like atmosphere research, forestry, and fisheries. So we can go into a very uncertain future basically blind.

In the book 1984, George Orwell speaks of “newspeak”, that when you can convince people that black is white and that war is peace, you can tell them anything. And what better way to allow people to believe whatever you say, by shutting down all avenues of serious, hard information.

How can we make truly informed decisions if the scientific community itself is shut down? I say to you, that in your society scientists better be up on the ramparts making sure you don’t fall on the path that Canada is on right now. When politicians are relieved of having to pay attention to real information – to science – they can base their decisions on what: the Koran? the Bible? My big toe has a bunion?

As a Canadian, I beg Australians to think hard on what’s happening in Canada, and please avoid that in your country.

So what do we do? For years in British Columbia, I’ve battled the forest industry over their clear-cut practices. To ward off these big battles, the British Columbia government set up a series of round tables where all of the stakeholders with a vested interest in a feature of that forest could come to the table and you’d then negotiate. They’re doomed to fail because what you do is you are fighting for your stake. Ultimately, what results is compromise. I just don’t think we’re at the point where we can compromise.

I’ve been asked by the vice president of Shell to meet with other environmentalists and his executives to talk about future energy strategies. But again, it was all couched within the perspective of “how do we pay for this” and “what is the economic cost of doing the right thing”? Same thing, the CEO of a consortium of tar sands companies, visited me and said: “will you talk to me?” And I said: “sure, I’m happy to talk, but I’ll only talk to you if we can agree on certain basic things. I don’t want to fight anymore. There’s no point fighting. Let’s start from a point of agreement.”

So, how about this? How about starting by saying, we are all animals, and as animals our most fundamental need, before anything else, is clean air, clean water, clean soil, clean energy and biodiversity.

But we’re also social animals, and as social animals, we have fundamental needs. What are our most fundamental social needs? Our most fundamental social need, it turns out, to my amazement, is love. Now, I’m not a hippie-dippie whatever. If you look at the literature, our most fundamental need for children is an environment of maximum love, and that they can be hugged, kissed, and loved. That’s what humanises us and allows us to realise our whole dimension.

If you look at studies of children growing up under conditions of genocide, racism, war and terror, children deprived of those opportunities, you find people who are fundamentally crippled physically and psychically. We need love, and to ensure love, we need to have full employment, and we need social justice. We need gender equity. We need freedom from hunger. These are our most fundamental needs as social creatures.

And then we’re spiritual animals. We emerged out of nature and when we die we return to nature. We need to know there are forces impinging on us that we will never understand or control. We need to have sacred places where we go with respect, not just looking for resources or opportunity.

I believe we are doomed to failure unless we come together to agree on what our most basic needs are. And then we ask: how do we create an economy; how do we make a living; how do we keep viable strong communities?

We’re doing it all the wrong way, because we take ourselves so seriously. And we think we’re so smart we create things that dominate the discussions. That’s the challenge and what has to change.

This is an edited excerpt from the 2013 Jack Beale Lecture on the Global Environment, “Imagining a sustainable future: foresight over hindsight”, delivered by Dr David Suzuki at the University of New South Wales on Saturday 21 September 2013.

To view David Suzuki’s speech in full, click here.

David Suzuki is the founder of the David Suzuki foundation, which collaborates with Canadians from all walks of life, including government and business, to conserve our environment and find solutions that will create a sustainable Canada through science-based research, education and policy work. You can review its funding here: http://www.davidsuzuki.org/donate/financial-information/. Information on his other affiliations is available here: http://www.davidsuzuki.org/downloads/drsuzukiCV.pdf

The Conversation

This article was originally published at The Conversation.
Read the original article.

Sep 242013
 

ABC NewsOriginal story by Eliza Borrello, ABC News

The former head of the Climate Commission, Tim Flannery, says he and some of his colleagues will relaunch it as a community-funded body today.

Professor Tim Flannery. Photo: Ludwik Dabrowski, Enough Rope

Professor Tim Flannery. Photo: Ludwik Dabrowski, Enough Rope

The Federal Government last week scrapped the Climate Commission, which was set up to advise on the science and economics of carbon pricing.

Tim Flannery says the Commission will relaunch as the Climate Council on Tuesday on the back of enormous public support.

Environment Minister Greg Hunt says he wishes Professor Flannery luck.

"That's the great thing about democracy - it's a free country and it proves our point that the Commission didn't have to be a taxpayer funded body."

Professor Flannery says he and his fellow former commissioners will volunteer their time to get the Council started.

Sep 232013
 

Department of Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry News Release

Queensland recreational crabbers are being warned to crab responsibly and to show respect for fellow crabbers after a spate of unlawful crabbing practices.

Queensland Boating and Fisheries Patrol (QBFP) officer Lyndon Peddell said crab pot interference and other illegal crabbing practices were major compliance issues for the patrol.

"There has been an increase in the number of complaints involving people allegedly removing crabs from pots.

"It's obvious that some fishers are just not getting the message," he said.

"Interfering with crabbing apparatus that are not your own is a serious offence and you will be caught.

"Anyone caught unlawfully interfering with crab apparatus will face an on-the-spot fine of $1100 or maximum penalties up to $55,000. That's a lot more expensive than the cost of buying a crab from your local seafood store.

"Stealing crabs or crab pots is a criminal offence, so those caught will also be referred to the police for investigation," he said.

Mr Peddell said people should be aware of all current crabbing rules including size and possession limits as well as crab pot regulations before hitting the water.

"There are different size and possession limits as well as measuring methods for the various crab species."

 

Crab Size limit (cm) Measurement Possession limit
Mud crab 15 min 10
Blue swimmer or sand crab 11.5 min No limit
Spanner or frog crab 10 min 20

"Female mud and blue swimmer crabs are no-take species and should be returned to the water immediately.

"It is also illegal to possess crabs with the carapace missing and crab meat while at sea unless it is for immediate consumption.

"No more than four crab pots or dillies, or a combination of both, are permitted to be used by a person at any time. They need to be clearly marked with the owner's name and address and if using a float, it must also have the owner's name on it.

"Also, ensure pots have enough rope attached to the float so they are not lost in strong tidal currents," he said.

Mr Peddell said fisheries regulations were aimed at sustaining Queensland's valuable fisheries resources.

"Rules are in place to protect and conserve crab stocks. By following the rules these valuable fisheries resources will be around for current and future generations of Queenslanders," he said.

"QBFP rely on the support of the public to help protect our fishing resources. People who suspect illegal crabbing are urged to do the right thing and report it to the Fishwatch hotline on 1800 017 116."

For more information on responsible crabbing, visit www.fisheries.qld.gov.au or call 13 25 23.

Follow Fisheries Queensland on Facebook and Twitter (@FisheriesQld).

 

Media contact: Jodana Anglesey, 3087 8601

Sep 232013
 

Original story by , The Age, at the Sydney Morning Herald

Warming trend: the rate of global warming may have been revised but there is no cause for celebration. Photo: AP

Warming trend: the rate of global warming may have been revised but there is no cause for celebration. Photo: AP

Climate change has been argued about for years, but the latest findings suggest relaxed attitudes towards the phenomenon will result in dangerous consequences for our planet in the very near future.

Early next week, hundreds of scientists will meet in Stockholm's Brewery Conference Centre to put the finishing touches on the world's most important climate change document. It is unlikely the beer will be flowing.

By Friday the United Nations' Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change will have released the results of its labour - the first part of its fifth major assessment of climate science.

There is more evidence than we had before.

Its last report, released six years ago, delivered a stark message: the climate is warming mostly because of human activity and poses a major threat - especially if global temperatures increase by more than two degrees.

Go beyond two degrees and the planet faces dangerously rising seas, larger drought-affected areas and more frequent extreme weather events, amid other dire projections.

That report won the group the 2007 Nobel Peace Prize, which the panel's chairman, Dr Rajendra Pachauri, observed would ''be seen as a clarion call for the protection of the Earth as it faces the widespread impacts of climate change''.

Six years on, the fifth report's core findings remain largely the same, only now there is even greater scientific certainty. But already, it is clear the fanfare that greeted the last report is unlikely to be repeated. And so far it is the areas of uncertainty in the report - inevitable when dealing with scientific predictions - that are creating headlines.

Illustration: Matt Davidson

Illustration: Matt Davidson

To prepare the report, scientists from throughout the world volunteer years of their lives to collate and assess data and modelling results to pull together the report's 3000 or so pages. The report is split into three sections: the first dealing with the physical science, the second and third - due out next year - looking at impacts and ways to cut emissions.

The IPCC does no research of its own, but calls on the expertise of about 830 scientists to draw together evidence from thousands of sources - from ice-core samples drilled out of Antarctica, to ocean temperature records sampled kilometres below the surface - to form the most comprehensive picture of the Earth's climate system.

Scientists who were lead authors on the report gave Fairfax Media a consistent message: the evidence of a warming planet caused by human activity - such as burning fossil fuels and cutting down forests - is stronger than six years ago.

Leaked drafts of the report seen by Fairfax Media reveal it is now ''extremely likely'' - greater than a 95 per cent certainty - that human activity is causing more than half the global warming felt since 1951. It is a small but important increase from the 2007 report's ''very likely'' assessment of 90 per cent confidence.

CSIRO climate scientist Dr Steve Rintoul, a co-ordinating lead author, says ''what is new is we can be more confident in those results, both in how the climate system has changed up to now and also the human contribution to those changes.''

Another lead author, Professor Nathan Bindoff, from the University of Tasmania's Institute for Marine and Antarctica Studies, says the increased confidence is borne from six more years of observations and more refined modelling of several key aspects of the climate system.

He points to losses in ice sheet mass from Antarctica and Greenland, changes in ocean salinity in different parts of the globe and increasing ocean heat content where data has been strengthened and clarified since the last assessment.

''There are some new things that have come along because we have longer records and there are new studies that tell us about human influence on all these aspects of the Earth system - the cryosphere, oceans, snow cover, the lower atmosphere, the upper atmosphere,'' Bindoff says.

''Collectively, that is a lot more evidence than we have had before. It is the comprehensive nature of it.''

Other significant signs include increased confidence that sea levels will rise this century due to faster melting glaciers and ice sheets. Under the worst-case scenario there is now medium confidence that sea level rises could be as much as 81 centimetres by the end of the century, a change that would devastate low-lying communities.

There is more confidence human activity is increasing some extreme weather events - warmer days and nights, and heatwaves - but there is less confidence about changes in the intensity of tropical cyclones.

Despite the increase in confidence, a significant part of public debate has focused on a slowing during the past 15 years in what had in previous decades been the dramatic pace of global warming - and whether that slowdown has implications for the long-term rise in temperature.

Climate sceptics have seized on the slowing to declare warming has paused or stopped, and suggest the danger of letting emissions continue to skyrocket has been exaggerated.

A final draft of the report, seen by Fairfax Media, says the rate of warming across the planet's surface in the past 15 years was about 0.05 degrees a decade - slower than the longer-term warming trend of 0.12 degrees since 1951.

But it does not say warming has reversed. ''Each of the last three decades has been warmer than all preceding decades since 1850 and the first decade of the 21st century has been the warmest,'' the draft report says. The data underpinning the report suggests 12 of the hottest years in modern times have been this century.

Another key area of conjecture is what is known as ''climate sensitivity'': the expected warming that would come from doubling the concentration of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere. The 2007 report projected that this would increase temperatures by between 2 degrees and 4.5 degrees. Drafts of the new report drop the lower end of that range to 1.5 degrees, but maintain the 4.5 degrees high end.

The Australian, in a story quoting the British tabloid The Daily Mail, last week reported the debate over climate sensitivity under the headline: ''We got it wrong on warming, says IPCC''.

But both papers misquoted the last IPCC report, almost doubling its assessment of the observed long-term warming rate and making the comparison with the current report look more stark than it is.

But the pace of warming for the 15 years between 1997 and 2012 has been slower than some of the modelling projections in the 2007 report, which reported a 0.2-degree-a-decade warming rate from 2005 to 2025.

The authors of the 2013 report say the recent slowdown in warming is not significant, that it's the long-term trend that matters. The new report finds that, across land and water, the planet has warmed an average 0.89 degrees since 1901.

''These periods of a decade or more where the rate of warming slows or increases are not unusual,'' Rintoul says. ''If we look back at the temperature record over the last 100 years or so, we see times when the Earth's surface was warming rapidly and times when it was slower, so in that sense it is no surprise.''

What causes decadal changes in the rate of warming? IPCC lead author Professor Steve Sherwood, from the University of NSW, says there are no definitive answers, but points to changes in the uptake of heat in the oceans as one factor. Others include changes in atmospheric aerosol concentrations and solar activity. Sherwood likens decadal changes in warming rates to a cancer sufferer. While they may feel a little better one week compared with the next, it does not mean they are rid of the disease.

Rintoul says the oceans are an important factor in speeding up and slowing down warming in the short term because the more heat stored in the ocean, the cooler the Earth's surface is.

Drafts of the new report say ocean warming has continued unabated and accounts for 93 per cent of the extra heat in the climate system since 1971.

Rintoul says at different times heat stored in the oceans can cycle between higher and lower depths, affecting warming rates on land. He says some heat stored in the oceans may also seep back out, accelerating warming. But it is not clear what triggers this all to happen.

Climate sensitivity is a significant point of debate among scientists working on the report, and some believe wording about the issue could be debated at the Stockholm meeting right up to the release of the report.

Pennsylvania State University climate scientist Michael E. Mann told The New York Times last month he feared the IPCC had been swayed by criticism from climate doubters and had ''erred on the side of understating the degree of the likely changes''. Equally, others say the minor change at the low end of the long-term warming range - down from 2 degrees to 1.5 degrees - is an appropriately conservative response to a genuine debate in scientific circles.

But Sherwood strongly rejects suggestions the changes are an admission of past errors. He returns to his cancer patient analogy: if the diagnosis is the patient is going to die, but there is some uncertainty on exactly when, you do not just throw out the initial diagnosis of death.

The panel's caution this time is likely the result of its experiences during the past six years - notably revelations of three errors in the fourth assessment, including a mistakenly exaggerated claim about future melting in Himalayan glaciers.

While none of these errors was crucial to the central science, it significantly dented the credibility of the UN organisation. Since then it has gone through several reviews, including implementing a system under which almost anybody could sign up to be an expert reviewer of the work. The first section of the 2013 report has received almost 55,000 comments.

Calls for much more radical reform continue. Professor Barry Brook, a senior climate scientist at the University of Adelaide, who is not involved in the IPCC, is among a growing group who say the six-year report process is too slow, too incremental and has outlasted its usefulness. He says the IPCC should issue shorter, more frequent and more targeted reports on specific areas of concern, such as sea ice loss.

One argument in favour of releasing a major report every six years is that it acts as a marker for the fraught negotiations between countries on a global treaty to reduce emissions. But are governments and the community listening? In the West, polls suggest people are less concerned about climate change than in 2007.

The time the last report was released, a Bureau of Statistics survey found 73 per cent of Australians were concerned about it; four years later it had fallen to 57 per cent.

ANU political scientist Professor Ian McAllister says the global financial crisis played a major role, focusing people more on short-term economic security over issues like the environment.

''You saw before the financial crisis people were more likely to rate the environment as a priority issue,'' he says. ''Since then people are more concerned about the economy, job security, things like that.''

Ultimately nervous climate change observers hope debates about sensitivity and short-term warming trends do not distract from the main points of the report or will be used by some governments to reduce their ambition to cut emissions.

After all, there is a significant sting in the tail of the report.

For the first time the IPCC has included an estimate of the total amount of carbon dioxide that can be emitted into the atmosphere after pre-industrial times and still maintain a good chance of keeping global warming below two degrees.

At least half this carbon budget was already used up by 2011. And it does not include the impact of other greenhouse gases, such as methane and nitrous oxide. If it did, the budget would be much tighter.

To keep within even this generous two-degree budget, the draft report suggests the world needs to make radical and swift cuts to greenhouse gases along the lines of the toughest future emissions reduction path considered by the IPCC.

That would mean an average cut to emissions of 50 per cent by 2050 on 1990 levels. And by the end of the century, instead of adding carbon dioxide to the atmosphere, there is a good chance the world will need to find ways to draw it out.

Instead, work by lead author Dr Josep Canadell, from the CSIRO, and fellow colleagues at the Global Carbon Project, has found the world is tracking along the highest emissions path being considered by the IPCC. If this continues then, according to the draft report, the average global temperature would increase 2.6 degrees to 4.8 degrees by century's end.

Canadell says even if movements in climate sensitivity have bought the world, at best, a little time to avoid dangerous climate change, it is no reason for celebration.

''We should certainly not relax at all,'' Canadell says. ''If anything, the two degrees [target] will be very difficult, if not impossible, to reach. And two degrees is just the maximum we can afford.''

Hardly cause to raise a beer.

At a glance

The next report of the UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change is in three parts. Part one, released on Friday, deals with the physical science. Part two (effects) and part three (ways to cut emissions) are due next year.

The core finding is that evidence human activity is warming the planet is stronger than six years ago.

The pace of global warming during the past 15 years has been slower than in previous decades. Sceptics claim warming has paused or stopped, but the report says the slowdown does not change long-term trends.

 

Sep 222013
 

Original story by Jemima Garrett for Pacific Beat at Australia Network News

The world's biggest tuna company has called for government action to manage tuna stocks and promote sustainable fishing in the Pacific.

Southern bluefin tuna swim in the open ocean off Australia, January 2004. Photo: Kerstin Fritsches, AAP

Southern bluefin tuna swim in the open ocean off Australia, January 2004. Photo: Kerstin Fritsches, AAP

Industry groups met at the Pacific Islands Forum Fisheries Agency (FFA) Tuna conference in the Solomon Islands to look at how to broaden the tuna investment base in the region.

The FFA is a regional organisation developed to help Pacific countries control and develop their tuna fisheries.

Tri Marine International Managing Director Phil Roberts told Radio Australia's Pacific Beat there was a consensus among industry groups for a limit on fishing effort in the Pacific to protect fish stocks.

Tri Marine International is the world's biggest tuna company, and trades around $1 billion worth of tuna a year through its Singapore office.

Mr Roberts criticised the FFA's Vessel Day Monitoring scheme in promoting sustainability, saying the amount of registered fishing vessels had increased from 200 to 290 in the last five years.

The Vessel Day Scheme (VDS) is a system where vessel owners can purchase and trade fishing days at sea in places subject to the Parties to the Nauru (PNA) Agreement.

"As a means of limiting (fishing) effort the vessel day scheme has not been efficient," Mr Roberts said.

PNA controls the world's largest sustainable tuna purse seine fishery, with its members including the Federated States of Micronesia, Kiribati, Marshall Islands, Nauru, Palau, Papua New Guinea, Solomon Islands and Tuvalu.

Mr Roberts called on the the PNA to take action.

"PNA have authority and sovereign rights over their zones. They are in a extraordinarily powerful position to control this fishery," he said.

"We're all hoping they will eventually force a limit."

Mr Roberts said Tri Marine is expanding its more environmentally friendly pole and line fishing and fishing that avoids the use of Fish Aggregating Devices (FADS).

FAD's are buoys, floats or other man-made objects used to attract fish, and have been criticised by environmentalists for contributing to overfishing.

"Customers are asking for FAD free fish and our role as supplier is to supply what the customer wants," Mr Roberts said.

"We'd rather be ahead of the wave than trying to catch up."

Mr Roberts said the market for sustainable tuna was growing.

"Consumers everywhere are more and more attuned to the issues around sustainability and the practices used in catching."

FFA's 17 Pacific Island members are Australia, Cook Islands, Federated States of Micronesia, Fiji, Kiribati, Marshall Islands, Nauru, New Zealand, Niue, Palau, Papua New Guinea, Samoa, Solomon Islands, Tokelau, Tonga, Tuvalu and Vanuatu.

The FFA Tuna forum will be held between 18 to 20 September.