The Bullroarer - Monday 12 May 2008

ABC - Solar energy technology must be improved: G-G

Governor-General Major General Michael Jeffrey has stepped into the energy debate, saying solar power is Australia's best prospect of securing a large-scale clean and sustainable energy source. Speaking at a Future Summit in Sydney, he suggested water, food and the environment would be among Australia's top issues in 50 years time, and that all three were linked to plentiful and reasonably priced energy.

The Australian - Oil to stay high, says Knox

SANTOS acting chief executive David Knox thinks that world oil prices will remain high in the short term because of political instability in several of the major oil-producing countries. But he said in the long term, factors like demand from countries such as China and the rise of gas would play a far more important role.


SMH - You may be gridlocked, but at least it's not Adelaide

YOU may be able to avoid traffic gridlock by moving to Adelaide or Canberra - but you'll be bored witless if you do. This was the view of NSW Roads Minister, Eric Roozendaal, who yesterday dismissed ad campaigns by the SA and ACT governments which have targeted users of Sydney's rail network and its congested roads. Some of Sydney's train stations have been plastered with signs reading: "You'd be home by now if you lived in Adelaide".

The Australian - Chimneys sweep BP clean coal plan away

WHAT was touted as Australia's biggest contribution to developing clean coal technology for use around the world in reducing greenhouse gas emissions has been scrapped even before it got to first base. BP confirmed yesterday the $2 billion "hydrogen energy" coal-to-gas plant at Kwinana, south of Perth, would not proceed. ... The proposed onshore site was close to BP Kwinana oil refinery and Rio's HISmelt direct iron ore smelting plant. But after more than two years of investigations and several million dollars of research, BP has now admitted that the geological formations off Perth contain gas "chimneys" that mean it is next to impossible to establish a seal in the strata that could contain the CO2.

The Australian - Origin talks up gas

SIGNALLING it could push BG Group to increase a $12.9 billion cash bid, Australia's Origin Energy has provided a sharp reappraisal of its gas resources, saying this will be key to takeover discussions already under way. Origin, Australia's biggest coal seam gas producer, could boost its resources of the fuel to 10,000 petajoules, or about 10 trillion cubic feet, at current Asian liquefied natural gas prices, managing director Grant King said in a conference presentation lodged on Thursday with the Australian Securities Exchange.

The Age - Squeals over plan for luxury car tax

THE motor vehicle industry has slammed a budget plan to increase the tax on luxury cars, saying it will hurt families struggling with the higher cost of fuel and could force makers to drop safety features. Treasurer Wayne Swan has confirmed that tomorrow's budget will increase the tax on cars of more than $57,000 from 25% to 33% and will affect about 105,000 car purchases a year.

The Australian - Commodity prices expected to fall

THE West Australian Government has indicated clearly it believes the commodity price cycle will begin to turn down within three years. Revenue from iron ore, which is being priced at record levels with higher prices to come, is expected to plateau in the next three years and begin to fall in real terms in 2011-12.

The Australian - Rex hikes surcharge by $3 a sector

REGIONAL Express yesterday became the latest airline to raise its fuel surcharge when it added $3 a sector on all flights from May13. The airline, which recently was forced to cut routes after losing half its pilots so far this year, blamed the high cost of fuel for its decision to increase the levy -- which will also apply to subsidiary Air Link -- from $33 to $36.

Scoop.coo.nz - NZ: heavy emitters influence climate policy most

New Zealanders think heavy emitter businesses are having most influence on climate change policy. Businesses with high greenhouse gas emissions are having the most influence on climate change policy, according to a new national survey. Seventy per cent of New Zealanders think the heavy emitters have most influence, 17% more than the next nearest top influencer, environmental groups.

frogblog - What I’m reading today

Then there is the ongoing furore in the United Kingdom over Gordon Ramsey’s hyperbolic explosion that ‘British restaurateurs who serve up unseasonal produce flown in from all four corners of the world should be clapped in irons and slapped with a fine’. The resulting blog war is the internet at its most ‘deliciously’ ferocious. None of them mention this environmentally friendly solution though (not that it would work in New Zealand).

SMH - Tiny town takes on mine giant

RESIDENTS of a historic Hunter Valley hamlet are bracing for a David and Goliath fight with an American coalmining company they fear wants to wipe them off the map. Wambo Coal, a division of international mineral giant Peabody Energy, has applied for a 9.8-square-kilometre exploration licence with a view to extending its long-running operations in the Singleton area.

Stuff.co.nz - Meridian shuns NZ turbine as too small and noisy

Meridian Energy says Windflow Technology's turbines are too small and noisy and that is why it has shunned the New Zealand technology. Windflow chairman Barrie Leay criticised Meridian Energy and other state-owned electricity generators this week for ignoring his company's turbines and spending more than $1 billion importing European models.

Stuff.co.nz - Gasfields may be linked, court told

New Zealand's longest running insider trading case, which finally came to court last week, resumes after suggestions by an expert witness that some of the Taranaki basin's core deep gas and oil structures are connected. Consultant petroleum geologist Thomas Haskill told the High Court at Auckland on Friday that the porous nature of sediment on the seabed meant gas in the Pohokura, Turangi, Mangahewa and Kowahi fields could be linked.

SMH - Tax system review to examine costs of climate change

TAX breaks to help business and consumers make the transition to a lower-carbon economy will be considered as part of a wide-ranging review of federal, state and local taxes headed by the Treasury Secretary, Ken Henry. Australia's complicated tax and welfare system will also be examined, as will state property taxes, company taxes and taxes on investment and savings.


Nothing governments can do about rising oil prices- Peak oil expert Richard Heinberg

Interesting interview of Richard Heinberg by Tony Jones, they haven't got the transcript up yet but it's well worth a watch.


Nothing governments can do about rising oil prices- Peak oil expert Richard Heinberg

Interesting interview of Richard Heinberg by Tony Jones, they haven't got the transcript up yet but it's well worth a watch.

At least the guv'ner isn't backing clean coal (unlike tonight's budget I suspect) so he could be on to something. I see Geosciences have a thorium project http://www.ga.gov.au/minerals/research/national/thorium/index.jsp
and there seems to be plenty about. Who knows if the technical bugs can be solved?

He asks how to store and transmit solar energy collected in area 50km square. I think the answer is don't but take the microstorage option with every house having PV with a battery. That is a lot harder to completely fail or cloud over than a big remote installation. Perhaps Yarralumla could be one of the first houses, followed by Parliament.

NSW Roads Minister, Eric Roozendaal is no doubt a boof-head, playing the tired Sydney-or-the-Bush riff, but he is also badly wrong. As someone (from Melbourne) who tends to spend a lot of time in Adelaide, I find its traffic flow (and the converse, congestion) really dreadful. For a "small" city (although in reality it stretches 80 km north to south) its main arteries simply do not cope with the traffic that wants to use it. Being criss-crossed by a grid of equally major roads doesn't help, and the traffic light system just builds delays everywhere.

I actually find Melbourne traffic more serene, more free-flowing in general, and most importantly, seems to have less impact on the residential communities it passes through. Everywhere in Adelaide feels like vehicular mayhem to me, by comparison. South Road is the stuff of nightmares, and it's not the only one. I also don't think Adelaide or Canberra are "boring" either - Sydneysiders remain quaint and slightly desperate-sounding, in their need to over-rate the desirability of their harbour-side town.

I agree about Adelaide traffic being rubbish - though I suspect Sydney's is still worse (I avoid the roads during peak hour except for a bit of dodging through the gridlock on my bike, so I'm not an expert on just how bad lie commuting from the burbs is, but my few morning experiences on places like Victoria Rd and Parramatta Rd make me keen never to do that on a regular basis).

I think everyone would agree that Eric Roozendaal is a boofhead (no offence Boof) but I still prefer living here to Adelaide or Canberra - the beaches are a lot better for a start, as is the weather. But I wouldn't call the other places boring - they're alright - by and large how "good" a city is depends on which part you live in and spend most of your time...

I've live in both Adelaide and Canberra for a couple of decades, and visited Sydney and Melbourne heaps. Which city is the nicest?...Hobart.

Hmmm - nice place to visit but its a bit chilly.

And the beaches definitely aren't a drawcard.

To each his own though _ i always like going there.

Roozendaal is pretty much an entertainment industry all on his own. The guy could talk under wet motorway concrete! - I can still remember him concluding an interview about bus lanes with the comment "I love my car".
http://www.abc.net.au/stateline/nsw/content/2006/s1589239.htm

Ironically, his car once got into the limelight as well, when the Sydney Sunday Telegraph photographed him travelling in (ahem!) a bus lane!!!
http://www.news.com.au/story/0,23599,18760911-1702,00.html

But all this pales into insignificance compared with our state Treasurer, Michael Costa, whose dismissal of Peak Oil in State Parliament last year was absolutely jaw-dropping...
http://www.parliament.nsw.gov.au/prod/parlment/hansart.nsf/V3Key/LC20070...

I do not know where to start to answer that question.

The only part of the Hon Michael Kosta's answer that was credible. But it must be said, despite the compelling data (and evidence) that high prices will not produce new technology and new reserves, I don't think I would like to be a politician trying to sell Peak Oil to the electorate. They (the punters) can deny all they want, and keep the dream alive, but unfortunately they vote as well. Richard Heinberg was sober and measured last night - and even if he were only half right - it should be front-page news. But as has been suggested on The Oil Drum for some years now (since birth?), we have to run the car into a brick wall before we decide it's time to apply the brakes. Unfortunately.

I thought Costa's performance at the state ALP conference last week was probably "better" - telling everyone to "get f*cked" numerous times and generally behaving like a manic depressive maniac (which I think the SMH said he actually is - bipolar disorder being the term they used if I recall correctly).

A few new stories for tonight - no BullRoarer until Wed :

ABC - Australian solar centre first for research

SMH - The devil has a microphone (at Town Hall station)

ABC - Roma desalination plant opens

A $20 million reverse osmosis plant will be opened north of Roma today, desalinating nine million litres of water a day from the coal seam gas industry. Origin says the water being produced is now supplementing flows in a local creek, and could be used for horticulture, forestry, industrial use or supplementing town water supplies.

NZ Herald - Untapped resource (coal seam gas) could offer energy boost

The Australian - Oil Search braves Iraq with stake in Kurdistan oil venture