Thursday 14 June 2012

Largest marine protection ever created - The Wilderness Society


Largest marine protection ever created Green Turtle Today Australia has announced the creation of the world's largest marine reserve network ever created. We will place around 2.3 million square kilometres of Australia's oceans into some form of reserve, which will stop the most damaging types of fishing such as bottom trawling -the clearfelling of the sea.


Sunday 11 March 2012

Seattle's First Urban Food Forest Will Be Open To Foragers

Designers of a food forest in Seattle want to make blueberry picking a neighborly activity.
Enlarge iStockphoto.com
  Designers of a food forest in Seattle want to make blueberry picking a neighborly activity.
If you're a regular reader of The Salt, you've probably noticed our interest in foraging. From San Francisco to Maryland, we've met wild food experts, nature guides and chefs passionate about picking foods growing in their backyards.

Now, Washington state has jumped on the foraging bandwagon with plans to develop a 7-acre public plot into a food forest. The kicker? The lot sits smack in the middle of Seattle.
The idea is to give members of the working-class neighborhood of Beacon Hill the chance to pick plants scattered throughout the park – dubbed the Beacon Food Forest. It will feature fruit-bearing perennials — apples, pears, plums, grapes, blueberries, raspberries and more.

Over Half of Germany’s Renewable Energy Owned By Citizens & Farmers, Not Utility Companies

Over Half of Germany’s Renewable Energy Owned By Citizens & Farmers, Not Utility Companies

from TreeHugger, by Mathew McDermott, January , 2012


photo by Thomas Kohler
Germany’s promotion of renewable energy rightly gets singled out for its effectiveness, most often by me as an example of how to do things well versus the fits and starts method of promotion common in the US. Over at Wind-Works, Paul Gipe points out another interesting facet of the German renewable energy saga: 51% of all renewable energy in Germany is owned by individual citizens or farms, totaling $100 billion worth of private investment in clean energy.

Tuesday 6 March 2012

Newsletter - Leadbeater’s Possum

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Date: 6 March 2012 12:03:26 GMT
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It is horrifying that we have to fight our own government to save the environment - Ansell Adams
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Update


Big thank you!


Leadbeater's Possum


Case closed for consideration - a time to say thank you
 

The Sylvia Creek court case came to a close on February 21, 2012 after a two week hearing in the Supreme Court of Victoria and five months of intense preparation. Big bunches of flowers were handed to the legal team in court to say 'thank you' - maybe a precedent for them? It certainly was for us.

 

A large collective of people and groups have been behind this challenge. This was a massive case to run on every front. Personally, our family were incredibly tolerant - a huge thanks to my father who was instrumental in keeping us fed and the dog with food in her bowl. 

 

Our community is blessed with people who put themselves second to what needs to be done for the environment. Locals like; Steve M, Liz and Bernie, Tab, Sera, Don B, Trent, Vik and tiny Jarrah. Jill and David, Lorraine, Ray and Marion, Mal and Evonne, Chris and Mark, Toby and Deanne, Gav, Luke, Poppy, Zoe, Rosie and Ben, Sarah C, Andy, Simone, Cathy, John F, Luke, Lynne, Karen, Mary and the Earthsong Brothers and Sisters, Karena, Pam, Emma, Tony, Rupert and Jules, Good Will Wine, The Zoo Crew, Deano and Buckleys, Cathy and the crew at Mud Glass Metal for the donations that will feature in an exhibition. Samantha Dunn (and family) for their tireless support always. Thank you Tim. Thank you to the Warburton community - Christian, Maya, Karina, Simon, Kirsty, Keith, Melissa, Peter, Rosie, Ben A and many more.

Thank you to Megan in the office for handling the swell in donations - an impressive effort given the task is usually a lot less daunting.

Thank you to the countless members of the local community who helped when they could and in many important ways, whether with food or money or a letter in the local.

Thank you to Karena Goldfinch and Brent Lukey for their photography of Sylvia Creek and its defenders.

 

Thank you to the myriad of supporters from Melbourne - The Melbourne New Folk mob, Luke Chamberlain, Warwick, Pia, Geraldine, Trier, Scotty, Richard and the larger WAG contingent. John P, Lauren and the Friends of the Earth crew, Nicola, Ula and the Last Stand crew.

Big thanks to Jacques Cop, his wife and girls and his team for the many, many hours of time you gave to this case. Thank you to Lawyers for Forests Glen and co. Thanks to AFCA and the Vic Forest Alliance and for the use of everyones lists to raise the capital thus far for this case.

 

Thank you to financial investors like my friend John, Coalition of the Willing to Save Wildlife, Live and Learn, Friends of Leadbeaters, Healesville Environment Watch Inc., Mt Evelyn Environment Protection and Progress Association, Markets for Change,The Wilderness Society, Richard, Chris and some wonderful anonymous donors.

 

Thank you to everyone who faced arrests so that we could finish the surveys (16 of you at last count), suffering bitterly cold conditions and police dogs. Thank you to the many who forfeited paid work to give their time to this case. Thank you to those who gave of their pension, gave of their salary, gave of their pocket money. Thank you to the incredible local and city court supporters, some travelling 4 hours a day to sit in. Thank you to Search and Rescue who showed respect to the protestors but we have to say that the use of dogs on innocent people was a bad idea. (This matter is now being investigated officially).

 

Thank you to Environment East Gippsland for having the courage to go first and for sending out our appeal. Jill Redwood and her team are fearless leaders.

 

It has been an honor to work with the legal team. Our Senior Counsel Kristen Walker, a brilliant and highly skilled barrister, was described by a member as "an extraordinarily intelligent woman with a forensic mind..it doesn't get more dangerous". Thank you to our Junior Counsel Emrys Nevkapil for providing exceptional insight, strategy and being the only bloke on the legal team, well, that speaks for itself. Thank you to Ms Vanessa Bleyer, the woman that has legally challenged the destruction of Australia's forests across the borders. Bleyer Lawyers are a slick, all female unit of conservation lawyers that are authentically charitable and truly understand the problems facing the planet. Every capital city needs one.

 

Thank you to Professor David Lindenmayer for his advice and expert testimony on the Leadbeater's Possum. His work has carved the cradle needed to save this little marsupial, the forest in which it inhabits and the water that flows from it. Professor Lindenmayer is a wonder of the science world. Even VicForests' Michael Ryan described him as an 'extremely prolific writer'. Lindenmayer is a profoundly gifted scientist whose dedication to Australia's landscapes and wildlife have earned him global respect. It's been an honor.

The ANU research team; David Blair and Lachie McBurnie - more common in our forests than Leadbeater's and actually capable of leaping Corea in a single bound. Their knowledge of the foests was an important resource for the Legal Counsel. Thank you.

 

The costs of this case was, and continues to be, challenging. As we were nearing the court commencement date we saw the costs double when VicForests introduced the economic argument into the mix. This required new experts like forest economics expert Dr Judith Ajani. Ajani's discerning defense virtually rendered VicForests' counsel mute and was a day in court I will never forget.

 

VicForests' team also requested luxuries like electronic transcripts and we had airfares for more specialists as they attempted to unpick our case.  During the trial many people invested, some have even invested several times over. In total, $117,000 has been contributed and we still have another $123,000 outstanding in bills and invoices for legal and expert advisors.

 

The good news is that change is underfoot in how the government are handling the threat of logging on wildlife. There appear to be new priorities for the agencies running the forests and you have yourselves to to thank for this. Win or lose, we have already changed the priority of government for the Leadbeater's Possum.

 

During the trial, the first ever scientifically studied colony of Leadbeater's Possum on Lake Mountain went extinct. In a desperate race against time Zoo's Vic have taken the last three possums and are keeping them close whilst they figure out what to do. This was a dramatic moment in the case and has driven home how quickly large colonies can collapse. This colony was genetically distinct from other populations. 

 

To see the results of your investment, have a look at some of the exhibits and transcripts. The maps that will ultimately tell the story will be uploaded over the next day or so - feedback on the best way to present them online is most welcome (they are large PDFs) sarah@myenvironment.org.au.

Be as proud to be part of this case as we are, Australia is one of the few countries that people can give a voice to the voiceless. Inspite of the politics, Australia is a very special place.

 

The Transcripts are available.

 

The Defendant's exhibits from the case are available.

 

The Plaintiff's exhibits from the case are available .

Thank you,

Sarah Rees and the Team.



Important news:

At the end of this month, VicForests are facing criminal proceedings, brought by the DSE, in the Orbost Magistrates court for the alleged logging of rainforest in East Gippsland.

In Early April, VicForests will again face the Supreme Court, brought by Environment East Gippsland, for the alleged unlawful logging of rainforests on the edge of the Errinundra National Park.


The Syrian people's gift to us

Posted by Avaaz:

Dear friends,

<http://avaazimages.s3.amazonaws.com/syriawoman.jpg>

Powered by millions of online actions and donations from 75,000 of us, our community is playing a central role in supporting the Syrian people as they persist in peaceful protest against all odds. Together, we're empowering citizen journalism, smuggling in medical supplies and western journalists, and much more. We're making a difference, but the staggering bravery of the Syrian people is their gift to the rest of us. Read this email for the full story, or look at this recent media coverage of Avaaz's work on Syria: BBC, CNN, El Pais, TIME, The Guardian, Der Spiegel, AFP.
This morning, 4 western journalists are home safe with their families, the echoes of the horror and heroism of Baba Amr still ringing in their ears. Over 50 Syrian activists, supported by Avaaz, volunteered to rescue them and scores of wounded civilians from the Syrian army's killzone. Many of those incredible activists have not survived the week.

Abu Hanin is one of the heroes. He's 26, a poet, and when his community needed him, he took the lead in organizing the citizen journalists that Avaaz has supported to help the voices of Syrians reach the world. The last contact with Abu Hanin was on Thursday, as regime troops closed in on his location. He read his last will and testament to the Avaaz team in Beirut, and told us where he had buried the bodies of the two western journalists killed in the shelling. Since then, his neighborhood of Baba Amr has been a black hole, and we still don't know his fate.

It's easy to despair when seeing Syria today, but to honour the dead, we must carry forward the hope they died with. As Baba Amr went dark and fears of massacre spread, Syrians took to the streets -- yet again -- across the country, in a peaceful protest that showed staggering bravery.

Their bravery is our lesson, the gift of the Syrian people to the rest of us. Because in their spirit, in their courage to face the worst darkness our world has to offer, a new world is being born.

And in that new world, the Syrian people are not alone. Millions of us from every nation have stood with them time and time again, right from the beginning of their struggle. Nearly 75,000 of us have donated almost $3 million to fund people-powered movements and deliver high-tech communications equipment to help them tell their story, and enable the Avaaz team to help smuggle in over $2 million worth of medical supplies. We've taken millions of online actions to push for action from the Security Council and the Arab League and for sanctions from many countries, and delivered those online campaigns in dozens of stunts, media campaigns and high-level advocacy meetings with top world leaders. Together we've helped win many of these battles, including for unprecedented action by the Arab League, and oil sanctions from Europe.

Our team in Beirut has also provided a valuable communications hub for brave and skilled activists to coordinate complex smuggling operations and the rescue of the wounded and the journalists. Avaaz does not direct these activities, but we facilitate, support and advise. We have also established safe houses for activists, and supported the outreach and diplomatic engagement of the Syrian National Council -- the opposition movement's fledgling political representative body. Much of the world's major media have covered Avaaz's work to help the Syrian people, including features on BBC, CNN, El Pais, TIME, The Guardian, Der Spiegel, AFP and many more, citing our "central role" in the Syrian peaceful protest movement.

Today, a dozen more nightmares like that visited on the city of Homs are unfolding across Syria. The situation will get worse before it gets better. It will be bloody, and complicated, and as some protesters take up arms to defend themselves, the line between right and wrong will blur. But President Assad's brutal regime will fall, and there will be peace, and elections, and accountability. The Syrian people simply will not stop until that happens -- and it may happen sooner than we all think.

Every expert told us at the beginning that an uprising in Syria was unthinkable. But we sent in satellite communications equipment anyway. Because our community knows something that the experts and cynics don't -- that people power and a new spirit of citizenship are sweeping our world today, and they are fearless, and unstoppable, and will bring hope to the darkest places. Marie Colvin, an American journalist covering the violence in Homs, told Avaaz before she died, "I'm not leaving these people." And neither will we.

With hope, and admiration for the Syrian people and courageous citizens everywhere,

Ricken, Wissam, Stephanie, Alice, David, Antonia, Will, Sam, Emma, Wen-Hua, Veronique and the whole Avaaz team

P.S. If you want to do more, click here to help keep our lifeline of hope into Syria open:
https://secure.avaaz.org/en/smuggle_hope_into_syria_rb//?vl <http://open.avaaz.org/act/open/1640512043.gif>
________________________________
Avaaz.org is a 13-million-person global campaign network that works to ensure that the views and values of the world's people shape global decision-making. ("Avaaz" means "voice" or "song" in many languages.) Avaaz members live in every nation of the world; our team is spread across 13 countries on 4 continents and operates in 14 languages. Learn about some of Avaaz's biggest campaigns here, or follow us on Facebook or Twitter.

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--
http://www.thearthousesouthampton.co.uk
The only impossible journey is the one you never began.

Friday 10 February 2012

Ecuador Ministry of Health Investigates and Closes Ex- Gay Torture Clinics


"After ten years of outcry, the nation of Ecuador -- through the Ministry of Public Health -- has entered into a commitment with civic organizations, and society in general, to deconstruct the belief that homosexuality is an illness and root out the use of torture in these clinics. We extend our thanks to all the men and women who signed our petition -- it's been an invaluable support in starting to change this reality." - petition creator, Fundacion Causana

Saturday 21 January 2012

Solar subsidy cuts: government offers compromise

Andy Atkins, the executive director of Friends of the Earth – one of the three parties to take legal action against the government over the cuts – said: "At last the government is taking steps to sort out some of the uncertainty that's crippling a thriving UK industry – planned cuts will at last allow solar firms to start planning for the future. Solar payments should be cut in line with falling costs – but by trying to rush through payment before the consultation closed ministers created a shambolic mess that threatens 30,000 jobs and the future of the industry."

SOPA Got Stopped: Stop Online Piracy Bill Actually Dead

Despite what Forbes contributor John Gaudiosi and many others said, SOPA was alive all week, even after President Obama came out against it and scores of senators fled in the wake of the internet blackout. That is no longer the case. After massive protests and amidst rapidly declining support, both SOPA and PIPA have been shelved indefinitely.

Live music red tape likely to be relaxed

Live music red tape likely to be relaxed

Paul McCartney plays at the Cavern Club The bill affects venues with a capacity of fewer than 200 people, such as Liverpool's Cavern Club

Legislation which will make it easier for small venues to host live music has been cleared in the House of Commons.  The private member's bill, introduced by Liberal Democrat Don Foster, will lift some of the bureaucracy imposed on gigs by the 2003 Licensing Act.
It means many venues will no longer need to pay for a licence to host live music between 08:00 and 23:00.