The Replace Hazelwood National Day of Action is on tomorrow, Saturday July 16.
YCAN and DarebinCAN will be manning a stall in North Fitzroy from 11am onwards.
The Replace Hazelwood National Day of Action is on tomorrow, Saturday July 16.
YCAN and DarebinCAN will be manning a stall in North Fitzroy from 11am onwards.
The Replace Hazelwood campaign has been on in earnest for some time now. In short, from replacehazelwood.com.au
Hazelwood is Australia’s dirtiest power station. This election year, we’re calling on the Victorian and Federal Governments to commit to Replace Hazelwood with Clean Energy by 2012. Can you help us make it happen?
Check out the official website.
Doorknocking has been underway in a number of suburbs in Melbourne for about a month now. There have also been a range of other actions around the place. More info on upcoming dates at the climate action centre.
The Victorian Greens have recently incorporated action on Hazelwood into their campaign.
Federal Labor MP Kelvin Thompson has also recently voiced support for taking steps to close the plant.
There is a National Day of Action to Replace Hazelwood on July 17.
The Municipal Association of Victoria has recently launched its Give Our Streets the Green Light campaign for energy efficient street lighting. More information on their campaign website.
Greenpeace currently has an action to help Keep Lake Baikal Alive. A truly stunning area of natural beauty that has already suffered enough destruction! They also have a general info page on Lake Baikal.
A very successful Politician Rebranding session was held this morning by members of Yarra Climate Action Now (YCAN) in Clifton Hill. Local Labor MP Richard Wynne had set out to promote his green credentials with a ‘Showerhead Exchange’. The YCAN members were on hand across the road to point out some more urgent environmental priorities! The ‘Honk for Urgent Climate Action’ sign proved a real winner with passing motorists (much to the chagrin of Mr Wynne and his staffers!) Video below.
For more info on the weekly rebranding sessions outside Richard Wynne’s office, check out the YCAN blog.
A new campaign from Greenpeace: Killer
An upcoming talk at the Climate Action Centre: Should we fly? Air travel and climate change.
6.30 pm Thursday March 25
Climate Action Centre
Lvl 5, New Building, Victorian Trades Hall
Cnr. Victoria & Lygon Streets, Carlton South
Yarra Climate Action Now has a youtube video up on their efforts at ‘Political Rebranding’ of Brumby Government Minister Dick Wynne.
The action currently takes place every Wednesday from 5.30 to 6.30 at 112 Smith Street in Collingwood
Info on recent media coverage can be found on the YCAN Blog.
Friends of the Earth Australia have found a site for their pilot sustainable supermarket campaign. To be located at the old South Melbourne Catholic Primary School (next to the church of Fr Bob Maguire). The tentative name is South Melbourne Commons.
The site will feature, a cafe, food cooperative, grocery store & deli with a weekly Saturday Eco Market operation starting later in the year. Weekly workshops and community activities will be a common occurrence.
They’re looking for volunteers to help out with preparing the site.
Gardening Working Bee with BBQ & Beer – Sunday January 31st 10am – 3pm
Bring your shovel, fork and gloves as we get down and dirty in the garden. We’ll be weeding, mowing, slashing, cutting and removing some plants to make way for a host of future food production gardens. We’ll also need a slasher and lawn mower.
Demolition Day with BBQ & Beer – Sunday February 7th 10am – 3pm
Under guidance from experienced trades people, we’ll be cutting out internal walls, washing, filling gaps, painting, sweeping and getting the site ready for use. Everyone is welcome, but we would especially like people with trades skills and tools to contact us so we can be prepared.
An interesting perspective from psychologist George Marshall (who can also be found at Carbon Detox and Climate Change Denial) in Yes magazine: Why We Find It So Hard to Act Against Climate Change
So why has so little happened? Why do people who claim to be very concerned about climate change continue their high-carbon lifestyles? And why, as the warnings become ever louder, do increasing numbers of people reject the arguments of scientists and the evidence of their own eyes?
According to Norgaard, most people have tacitly agreed that it is socially inappropriate to pay attention to climate change. It does not come up in conversations, or as an issue in voting, consumption, or career choices. We are like a committee that has decided to avoid a thorny problem by conspiring to make sure that it never makes it onto the agenda of any meeting.
In opinion poll research the majority of people will define it as far away (“it’s a global problem, not a local problem”) or far in the future (“it’s a huge problem for future generations”). They embrace the tiny cluster of skeptics as evidence that “it’s only a theory,” and that “there is still a debate.” And they strategically shift the causes as far away as possible: “I’m not the problem—it’s the Chinese/rich people/corporations.” Here in Europe we routinely blame the Americans.
In all of these examples, people have selected, isolated, and then exaggerated the aspects of climate change that best enable their detachment. And, ironically, focus-group research suggests that people are able to create the most distance when climate change is categorized as an “environmental” problem.
How can we energize people and prevent them from passively standing by?
We must remember that people will only accept a challenging message if it speaks to their own language and values and comes from a trusted communicator.
We must recognize that the most trusted conveyors of new ideas are not experts or celebrities but the people we already know.
And finally we need to recognize that people are best motivated to start a journey by a positive vision of their destination—in this case by understanding the real and personal benefits that could come from a low-carbon world.
Doesn’t seem as easy as I had hoped to find somewhere in Melbourne to recycle a stack of CDs and DVDs that I have no use for. Gram Destruction in Tullamarine look like the best option in Melbourne (and Victoria for that matter).
We recycle the discs, the cases, the cover and inserts, and any other booklets that may come with the disc. There is no need to separate discs from cases, or covers and inserts. All we ask you to do is to put them in boxes, shrink wrap and palatize them. We do the rest of the work for you. We will pay for the freight and also pay you a small fee (scrap value) for the discs.
You can bring your discs, etc. to our factory, or send them to us via post or courier.
Our factory address is:
Gram Destruction
Factory 4/46 Allied Drive
Tullamarine Vic 3043
Now, if only I could find a place to get rid of that stack of old floppy disks! [Update: They take them too!!]
The fantastic people at BREAZE (Ballarat Renewable Energy And Zero Emissions) now have a YouTube presence!
There is so much around the interwebs in response to the end of the Copenhagen Summit (COP15) that it is a bit overwhelming to blog about. Those things of interest that I can still recall/find follow…
Yarra Climate Action Now Copenhagen Analysis
Crikey – Copenhagen coming to a close: the end’s a scary place to start
Mostly it’s too hard to find the words to describe how I feel about climate change. This is even more so here in Copenhagen. Yesterday at a talk by George Monbiot he pointed out that climate change is too benign to describe what’s happening to the world … it’s like describing an invasion as “unexpected visitors”. To be young and alive today is to witness our earth breaking and see our “leaders” demonstrate a spectacular failure of leadership. As Alex Steffen wrote, “to be young and aware today is to see your elders as cannibals with golf clubs”.
CPD – The Road from Copenhagen | Thinking Points
Larvatus Prodeo – After Copenhagen
Climate Action Centre – A Climate Con – Analysis of the “Copenhagen Accord”
John Quiggin – Glass Half Full Department
Crikey – Copenhagen’s nasty negotiations (Clive Hamilton)
One of the lessons we Australians learned was that the American supremacism that underpinned the foreign policy approach of the neo-cons was not a Bush thing. Nor was it a Republican thing. It is an American thing, and the Democrats are just as likely to treat the rest of the world as a bunch of pissants as their GOP rivals. Stern proved this as Copenhagen. With the election of Barack Obama, no new era dawned in America.
But if all of this is too bleak, there was one spark of light. At a business fair in Copenhagen last week, Steven Chu, the US Energy Secretary, gave a Powerpoint presentation, one he had obviously given many times before.
He talked solely about technological possibilities, detailing the opportunities now opening up and the torrents of federal money being poured into the new energy industries. At the most senior levels, especially in the department of energy, the techno-geeks have taken over from the friends of the fossil fuel industry, and it is plain that, whatever happens to climate legislation in the US Congress or international treaties at Copenhagen, Obama appointees are going to use whatever levers they can to bring about a technological transformation in the eight years they have at the helm.
Crikey – Copenhagen: one, big, brutal reality check (Matthew Knott)
Copenhagen has offered the world a brutal reality check on the difficult road ahead in stopping runaway climate change. Perhaps, more than hope, that’s what we really needed anyway.
Also stumbled upon thanks to the Yarra Climate Action Now newsletter.
Save Solar Systems Rally
Saturday 23 January, 12 noon
Parliament House, Spring St, City.
More info: http://savesolarsystems.wordpress.com
Thanks to the Yarra Climate Action Now newsletter.
The Transition Decade Launch
Sunday 14 February, 12 noon
Melbourne Town Hall, Swanston St, City
See www.t10.net.au
From the FoE email. GreenPC are looking for monitor donations.
We need your monitors!
GreenPC is currently calling for your LCD and CRT monitors, to be recycled and distributed to low-income earners and other eligible customers. If you have a disused 17 inch CRT monitor or better, or a disused 15 inch LCD monitor or better, contact GreenPC on 03 9418 7400 or visit the donations page of the GreenPC website. GreenPC can also organise pick-up of donations of 10 or more monitors.
Another gem of information from the Friends of the Earth newsletter. Free workshops at CERES.
Lighting and Appliances
Wednesday, 20th January 6:30 pm – 8:30pm and
Saturday, 23rd January 6:30pm – 8:30 pmSustainable home renovation or rejuvenation
Wednesday, 10th February 6.30pm – 8.30pm and
Saturday, 13th February 1pm – 3pmSustainable Gardening
Saturday, 27th February 1pm – 4pm
Can’t seem to find the details on the CERES website. Probably best just to call reception on 03 9387 2609 to make bookings or find more info.
An excellent rundown of ideas from Planet Ark on how to make the festive season a bit more ethical. Available as both at PDF and as a Podcast. They also have a Festive Recycling section on their website.
The Australian Marine Conservation Society has produced a sustainable seafood pocket guide. They also sell an expended edition of the guide in their online store.
Available for download from the Friends of the Earth website.
This Seasonal Food Guide tells you what fresh fruits and vegetables are in-season for each month of the year in the Melbourne area. Developed by the Friends of the Earth Real Food group, the guide encourages you to buy local, fresh, seasonal produce from small independent shops and food cooperatives. The guide folds up and fits your purse or wallet so it’s easy to take it with you when you go out to do your shopping. You can download the guide here.
Get the guide: http://www.melbourne.foe.org.au/?q=rf/resources
Eating sustainably produced, locally grown, in-season food from small independent shops is one of the easiest things you can do to reduce your daily ecological footprint.
A debriefing session post Copenhagen. Organised by the Climate Action Centre. Details on their website.
Special briefing and discussion on the outcomes of the Copenhagen climate negotiations
An opportunity to find out what happened at Copenhagen and what it means for Australia and the planet.
6.30 PM, Monday December 21
Climate Action Centre
Lvl 5, New BuildingVictorian Trades Hall
cnr Lygon and Victoria sts
Carlton SouthJoin us for a drink and celebrate the end of the year and the achievements of the Victorian climate movement.
All Welcome
RSVP: 0419 253 342 or info@climateactioncentre.org
Survival Treaty / Suicide Pact speech by the President of the Maldives. Hopefully someone is listening. Full text follows…
Mr McKibben, fellow environmentalists, ladies and gentlemen,
Four years ago myself, and many fellow activists, sat in solitary confinement in Maldivian prison cells. We sat in those jail cells not because we had committed any wrong. We sat in those cells because we had deliberately broken the unjust laws of dictatorship. We had spoken out for a cause in which we believed. That cause was freedom and democracy.
There were times, sitting in that prison, when I felt more alone than you can imagine. There were times when I started to believe the doubters, who said the Maldives would never become free. Sometimes it felt like the doubters were right. The dictatorship had the guns, bombs and tanks. We had no weapons other than the power of our words, and the moral clarity of our cause. Many democracy activists like us had vanished, forgotten by history, their struggle a failure.
But, in spite of the odds, we refused to give up hope.We refused to listen to the voices of doubt and discouragement. We refused to be swayed by those who could not see that change was on the way. And we were right to stand up for what we believed.
We won our battle for democracy in the Maldives. I stand before you today as the first democratically elected President in the history of my country.
The path to democracy in the Maldives was not straight-forward. It was bumpy and full of turns. But we were determined that no matter how difficult the terrain, we would reach the end of the road. And we succeeded in our cause.
Four years later and a continent away, we meet here to confront another seemingly impossible task. We are here to save our planet from the silent, patient and invisible enemy that is climate change.
And just as there were doubters in the Maldives, so there are doubters in Copenhagen. There are those who tell us that solving climate change is impossible. There are those who tell us taking radical action is too difficult. There are those who tell us to give up hope.
Well, I am here to tell you that we refuse to give up hope. We refuse to be quiet.We refuse to believe that a better world isn’t possible.
I have three words to say to the doubters and deniers. Three words with which to win this battle. Just three words are all I need. You may already have heard them. Three – Five – Oh. Three – Five – Oh.
Three – Five – Oh, saves the coral reefs. Three – Five – Oh, keeps the Arctic frozen. Three – Five – Oh, ensures my country survives. Three – Five – Oh, makes a better world possible.
I am here to tell you that down the road in the Bella Center the Maldives team is fighting to keep Three – Five – Oh in the negotiating text.
They need all the help they can get from you. Please keep supporting them.
And the good news is that we are now part of a growing bloc of nations, all committed to keeping Three – Five – Oh as the central guiding goal of our global survival plan.
These nations need your help and support too.
I am not a scientist, but I know that one of the laws of physics, is that you cannot negotiate with the laws of physics. Three – Five – Oh is a law of atmospheric physics. You cannot cut a deal with Mother Nature. And we don’t intend to try.
This is why, in March, the Maldives announced plans to become the first carbon neutral country in the world. We intend to become carbon neutral in ten years. We will switch from oil to 100% renewable energy. And we will offset aviation pollution, until a way can be found to decarbonise air transport too.
For us, going carbon neutral is not just the right thing to do. We believe it is also in our economic self-interest. Countries that have the foresight to green their economies today, will be the winners of tomorrow. These pioneering countries will free themselves from the unpredictable price of foreign oil. They will capitalize on the new, green economy of the future. And they will enhance their moral standing, giving them greater political influence on the world stage. In the Maldives, we have relinquished our claim to high-carbon growth.
After all, it is not carbon we want, but development. It is not coal we want, but electricity. It is not oil we want, but transport. Low-carbon technologies now exist, to deliver all the goods and services we need. Let us make the goal of using them.
Let us make the goal of reaching that all-important number: three – five – oh.
We believe that if the Maldives can become carbon neutral; richer, larger countries can follow. But if there is one thing I know about politicians, it’s that they won’t act until their electorates act first. This is where you come in.
History shows us the power of peaceful protest. From the civil rights movement, to Gandhi’s Quit India campaign; non-violent protest can create change. Protest worked in the struggle for democracy in the Maldives. And on 24 October, we saw how protests across the world put Three – Five – Oh firmly on the Copenhagen agenda.
My message to you is to continue the protests. Continue after Copenhagen. Continue despite the odds. And eventually, together, we will reach that crucial number: Three – five – oh.
In all political agreements, you have to be prepared to negotiate. You have to be prepared to compromise; to give and take. That is the nature of politics. But physics isn’t politics. On climate change, there are things on which we cannot negotiate. There are scientific bottom lines that we have to respect. We know what the laws of physics say. And I think you know too.
The most important number in the world. The most important number you’ll ever hear. The most important number you’ll ever say. These three words: Three – five – oh. (Three – five – oh) (Three – five – oh)
A massive turnout according to the ABC: Massive turnout for Walk Against Warming.
More from Reuters: Australians walk to pressure Copenhagen.
In Melbourne, where the largest protest was held, marchers closed the event by spelling out the words ‘Safe Climate – Do It!’ on the ground. Organizers said aerial photographs were taken and sent to delegates in Copenhagen.
Police contacted by Reuters declined to give figures for the protests, confirming only that the Melbourne protest numbered in the thousands. However, organizers told Reuters police at the scene had told them the official police estimate was 40,000.
Photos from Environment Victoria on Flickr. Photos from AAP.
Too much to going on to effectively blog on here. But some excellent sources of info include.
Twitter: GetUp, tck tck tck, Climate Centre, 350 Australia, New Matilda, FoE Australia, Tim Hollo, Bill McKibben, 350 Media Room
Melbourne Walk Against Warming – a vital opportunity to send a message!
Where: Meet at the State Library, Swanston St (to walk to Princes Bridge where we’ll make a human sign)
When: Saturday 12 December at 12 midday
More info: GetUp, Walk Against Warming
