- Joined
- 20 July 2021
- Posts
- 11,972
- Reactions
- 16,670
isn't as much civilization in the area i left in April , nor the area around the other property i bought in 1975yes the planet will survive climate change, but that doesn’t mean our civilisation as we have built it will, or that it will be an enjoyable process.
evolution works through death and destruction.
Not sure why you say that Divs. This would simply change new investment from fossil fuel driven projects to renewable energy. Frankly I think it would result in a boon of manufacturing jobs. I think that aspect would be well and truly explained early in the piecemore important is CMFEU ( rank and file members ) will HATE the proposal
because the CFMEU wield a lot of power (and donations ) in the ALP ( the gravy train of theses two experts )
folks like MQG love emissions trading it is another source of fees/commissions/profits for them ( but not so much recently as volumes seem to have faltered )
i hold MQG ( 'free-carried' )
Presuming the majority of this $100B magic pudding is coming from the "105 coal and gas projects" we are looking at $1/2B to $1B per project on average?Under their plan, a "Carbon Solutions Levy" would be imposed on all fossil fuel extraction sites (around 105 coal and gas projects) and all fossil fuel imports (oil and diesel)
yes , but then you are supposed to just accept the narrativePresuming the majority of this $100B magic pudding is coming from the "105 coal and gas projects" we are looking at $1/2B to $1B per project on average?
Just had a look at BPT, a midrange company, 4 or 5 projects, annualised NPAT of about $400m.
Am I missing something?
Presuming the majority of this $100B magic pudding is coming from the "105 coal and gas projects" we are looking at $1/2B to $1B per project on average?
Just had a look at BPT, a midrange company, 4 or 5 projects, annualised NPAT of about $400m.
Am I missing something?
not much point in removing a petrol and diesel excise if most households are using public transport or personal EVs ( unless the plan is another secret subsidy to the mega-corp. world ) and $440 a year from artificially inflated power bills , is just election gimmicksYou may have overlooked out this part of the statement and all fossil fuel imports (oil and diesel) and exports . I also suggest that you shouldn't be looking at an average of .5 -$1B per project. It will be be on volume and clearly there are some huge oil/gas projects around particularly exports.
This is also predicated on 2030 implementation.
If you read the article the proposed Carbon Levy is a round robin. It will have an impact on cost of carbon baseed fuels. How would this affect households ?
That enormous pool of funds would then be used to over-compensate households, slashing their electricity bills by $440 a year and removing all petrol and diesel excise. They estimate this would significantly lower the Consumer Price Index by more than 1.5 percentage points.
"This is the mother of all cost-of-living events", Professor Sims told the ABC, highlighting the benefit to households. "Everyone is a winner except those fossil fuel companies", which he frankly admits "will hate it".
No, didn't overlook it, that's why I went with a range for the "Levy" of 50-$100B instead of the headline $100B.You may have overlooked out this part of the statement and all fossil fuel imports (oil and diesel) and exports
Replacing an excise with a "Levy"?and all fossil fuel imports
This reads as poor reporting in the article, it isn't "Levy" plus export tax, and if it was it just makes my point more valid.and exports
This is laughable, if green iron becomes economic in Australia China will just take a few solar panels out of their export stack and do it cheaper.He argues China will also need to import "green iron", due to its limited capacity to transition its own industry.
Thanks for that Houtman. I found the full address as well as details of proposals the Superpower Institute is suggesting.No, didn't overlook it, that's why I went with a range for the "Levy" of 50-$100B instead of the headline $100B.
Replacing an excise with a "Levy"?
This reads as poor reporting in the article, it isn't "Levy" plus export tax, and if it was it just makes my point more valid.
This is laughable, if green iron becomes economic in Australia China will just take a few solar panels out of their export stack and do it cheaper.
I'm all for Australia moving up the value train but this proposal is full of holes.
HUH ???It is far more coherent than the Press Release and adds some excellent insights into, for example, why China doesn't have the appropriate PV capacity to make green steel. (We however can)
I have rarely read such drivel and self serving rubbish since I gave a speech to a regional meeting of the Country Women's Association back in the day when I was courting the first Mrs Gumnut.I just realised there was a document that contained Ross Garnauts full address at the Press Club.
It is far more coherent than the Press Release and adds some excellent insights into, for example, why China doesn't have the appropriate PV capacity to make green steel. (We however can)
Global heating is having a world wide impact on food production and costs of production. The most recent issue has been the doubling of cocoa prices because of a severe heat wave in Africa.
In the overall picture it has become clearer that there is a long term inflationary cost due to CC.
Higher temperatures mean higher food prices, new inflation study finds
Posted Yesterday at 12:02pm
View attachment 173232
The study was conducted by an environmental scientist and the ECB.(ABC News: Maani Truu)
Link copied
- In short: "Weather and climate shocks" will cause the cost of food to rise 1.5 to 1.8 percentage points annually within a decade or so, researchers say.
- The study looked at monthly price tags of food and other goods, temperatures and other climate factors in 121 nations since 1996.
- What's next? By 2060, the climate-triggered part of inflation should grow, with global food prices predicted to increase 2.2 to 4.3 percentage points annually, the study said.
'Climateflation' tipped to drive up food prices, new study finds
Food prices and overall inflation will rise as temperatures climb with climate change, a new study by an environmental scientist and the European Central Bank finds.www.abc.net.au
Cocoa prices spiked to an all-time high right before Valentine's Day
Why is cocoa so expensive?
Cocoa's troubles stem from extreme weather in West Africa, where farmers grow the majority of the world's cacao beans.
"There were massive rains, and then there was a massive dry spell coupled with wind," says CoBank senior analyst Billy Roberts. "It led to some pretty harsh growing conditions for cocoa," including pests and disease.
Now, cocoa harvests are coming up short for the third year in a row. Regulators in the top-producing Ivory Coast at one point stopped selling contracts for cocoa exports altogether because of uncertainty over new crops.
And the rejection of science is coming true with climate change
This is absolute BS, absolutely no proper science behind the pushed link between CO2 and warming...And the rejection of science is coming true with climate change
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?