Monthly Archive for January, 2008

Friday Eco-fact: Australia Scores Poorly on Global Environment Report

It will be interesting if this reports gets as much air play on Australian news as the non-environmental whaling issue does:

AUSTRALIA has been given a lowly global ranking for environmental performance, mainly because of its assessment as a climate change laggard.

The nation is ranked 49th out of 149 countries on the 2008 Environmental Performance Index (EPI) with a score of 79.8 per cent, behind countries like the US and Brazil.

While major polluters China and India fared worse overall, they outperformed Australia on climate change.

The assessment was made before the Federal Government ratified the Kyoto Protocol last month.

The rating sees Australia drop 29 places from its number 20 position in the 2006 inaugural index, which is produced by a team of environmental experts from the US universities Yale and Columbia.

The researchers gave the nation a 99.3 per cent score on environmental health, but it was dragged down by a 60.4 per cent mark for ecosystem vitality. [AAP]

Corey Worthington Fight Staged?

I had my suspicions that the Corey Delaney Worthington fight was staged and it appears I may have been correct:

Sources told The Daily Telegraph Corey could face charges of affray and public mischief over the incident. 

"If it’s a hoax and it causes someone else to believe it’s real and report it we could look at someone being charged,” a Victorian police officer said.

Police were planning to interview Corey today, while officers would also want to speak with the teenager, who shot the video on a mobile phone.

A witness to the fight said Corey was only targeted for his so-called fame. "He thinks he’s all that, he’s famous now," he said.

Since gaining worldwide infamy, Corey’s bad attitude has inspired the internet game "Slap Corey", which has now been played more than 850,000 times.

Corey has since taken representation with celebrity agent Max Markson, and is reportedly preparing a world tour promoting and DJ-ing at parties. [The Daily Telegraph]

Corey Worthington is a total media creation and he is just feeding them exactly what they want in order to increase his notariety to launch his future party career.  I wouldn’t be surprised if there are more Corey Worthington hoaxes in the future as well.

South Australians Agree, They are a Backwater

Victorian Premier John Brumby made big headlines by calling Adelaide a "backwater" which was quickly condemned by South Australian politicians, but apparently most South Australians agree with him:

STATE politicians may be furious, but many South Australians seem to agree with Victorian Premier John Brumby that Adelaide is a "backwater".

Mr Brumby’s blunt assessment of the South Australian capital has been labelled insulting by the SA Opposition, while Premier Mike Rann said it just showed Victoria’s insecurity.

However an Adelaide Advertiser online poll shows most agree with Mr Brumby.

More than 60 per cent of more than 2500 respondents to the poll agreed with the Victorian Premier.

Asked the question: Is Adelaide a backwater, 48 per cent of respondents voted: "Yes – we lag behind the eastern states”.

A further 16 per cent voted: "Yes – but that’s part of the appeal”.

Some 27 per cent of people voted: "No – Brumby is a jerk”; while a further 7 per cent said: "No – look at how many major events are on at this time of year”.

Mr Brumby said yesterday Victoria would end up as a "backwater” like Adelaide if it didn’t proceed with channel-deepening in Port Phillip Bay.  [AAP]

I really like Melbourne and living in Victoria in general, but due to work related reasons I have often had to go to Adelaide and really do not have anything bad to say about the place.  The city is nice and easy to get around, the people are friendly, and has some nice beaches.  I could live there quite happily if I had to, but if I had a choice I would definitely choose to live in Melbourne instead.  Melbourne is closer to the  mountains, the snow fields, has more rivers and lakes, and the beaches are equal to anything in South Australia.  Really the only thing that South Australia has that Victoria doesn’t is the vast red outback which is extremely impressive but not enough for me to want to live there instead of here in Victoria. 

Anyone else have any thoughts on why they would choose living in Melbourne/Victoria over Adelaide/South Australia?

South Australians Agree, Adelaide is a Backwater

Victorian Premier John Brumby made big headlines by calling Adelaide a "backwater" which was quickly condemned by South Australian politicians, but apparently most South Australians agree with him:

STATE politicians may be furious, but many South Australians seem to agree with Victorian Premier John Brumby that Adelaide is a "backwater".

Mr Brumby’s blunt assessment of the South Australian capital has been labelled insulting by the SA Opposition, while Premier Mike Rann said it just showed Victoria’s insecurity.

However an Adelaide Advertiser online poll shows most agree with Mr Brumby.

More than 60 per cent of more than 2500 respondents to the poll agreed with the Victorian Premier.

Asked the question: Is Adelaide a backwater, 48 per cent of respondents voted: "Yes – we lag behind the eastern states”.

A further 16 per cent voted: "Yes – but that’s part of the appeal”.

Some 27 per cent of people voted: "No – Brumby is a jerk”; while a further 7 per cent said: "No – look at how many major events are on at this time of year”.

Mr Brumby said yesterday Victoria would end up as a "backwater” like Adelaide if it didn’t proceed with channel-deepening in Port Phillip Bay.  [AAP]

I really like Melbourne and living in Victoria in general, but due to work related reasons I have often had to go to Adelaide and really do not have anything bad to say about the place.  The city is nice and easy to get around, the people are friendly, and has some nice beaches.  I could live there quite happily if I had to, but if I had a choice I would definitely choose to live in Melbourne instead.  Melbourne is closer to the  mountains, the snow fields, has more rivers and lakes, and the beaches are equal to anything in South Australia.  Really the only thing that South Australia has that Victoria doesn’t is the vast red outback which is extremely impressive but not enough for me to want to live there instead of here in Victoria. 

Anyone else have any thoughts on why they would choose living in Melbourne/Victoria over Adelaide/South Australia?

Corey Worthington Fight Caught On Video

The notorious Melbourne teenage party boy Corey Worthington Delaney has made nation wide headlines again with the release of a grainy cell phone video that appeared on A Current Affair (ACA):

 

Can ACA get any more tabloid than this by giving this fight three minutes of air time?  Allegedly Corey Worthington was challenged to a fight and agreed.  I’m sure there are plenty of people out there who do not like him due to his attitude and popularity.  However, the cynical side of me just has to wonder if this fight was staged to make the headlines it is currently making?  It appeared Corey Worthington Delaney’s fifteen minutes of fame had run out and here he is again making nation wide headlines, which just happened to coincide with plans to launch a nation wide party tour.  Coincidence?

Why Not Plant Trees in Australia?

Instead of paying to buy carbon offsets in New Guinea why doesn’t Tim Flannery campaign for Australians to plant trees in Australia instead?  Probably less money in it for him. 

Don’t Let Melbourne Become A Backwater Like Adelaide

I have to wonder what South Australians think of this:

VICTORIAN Premier John Brumby has warned Melburnians they risk living in a “backwater” like Adelaide if Victoria is not allowed to push ahead with a plan to deepen a channel in Port Phillip Bay.

Mr Brumby said today the public should understand how vital the $1 billion dredging project was.

“This is very important to Melbourne, it’s very important to Victoria,” he said.

“If you want Melbourne to be a backwater, if you want Melbourne eventually to be an Adelaide – as someone described it the other day – well, don’t do this project, and Melbourne will just die a slow death.” [AAP]

The dredging project is needed because the world’s ships are becoming larger and Port Phillip Bay needs deeper channels to support the size of these ships. The Age has a really good interactive media site about the project here.

The greenies as usual are out protesting. These people protest absolutely everything here and seem to hold back government project after government project around here. The Sea Shepherd eco-loons are heading back to Melbourne after thier misadventures in the Antarctic, maybe they can attack the Dutch dredging ship as well and see what happens.

Coast Guard Officers Confirmed on Japanese Whaling Ships

While watching the Today Show this morning the announcer declared that there has been an "escalation" by Japan with the announcement that Japanese Coast Guard officers are stationed with the Japanese whaling fleet.  So I decided to go find out more details about this so called escalation and this is what I found:

Japan‘s coast guard said Tuesday it has sent a team of officers to protect its whaling fleet against intensifying protests by environmentalists.

The whalers have repeatedly clashed with environmentalists in the Antarctic Ocean and halted the hunt two weeks ago.

"Coast guards are there with a view to protect human lives and assets as they have suffered damage at the hands of activists," Japan Coast Guard spokesman Takashi Matsumori said.

The last time the maritime police sent officers to a non-Coast Guard vessel outside Japanese waters was in 1992 when it protected a ship controversially bringing plutonium from France for nuclear power generation.

The whaling mission left a Japanese port in November. The Mainichi Shimbun daily said the guards departed later on a supply ship and joined the mission in December.

The Fisheries Agency requested Coast Guard protection as it was alarmed by militant environmentalists who hurled stink bombs at the whaling fleet in February 2006 during the previous mission, the Mainichi said. [AFP]

The Japanese Coast Guard officers have been with the whaling fleet since December to protect the whalers from the militant attacks from the eco-terrorist Sea Shepherd group, yet the Japanese are the one "escalating" the situation?  The Coast Guard officers are not going to have a whole lot to do anyway since the Greenpeace ship and the Sea Shepherd loons are all departing the Southern Ocean due to being low on fuel and leaving the Australian custom ship to monitor the Japanese whalers:

The Sea Shepherd environmental group says the Federal Government’s monitoring of the Japanese whaling fleet in the Southern Ocean is pointless unless the Customs ship Oceanic Viking is given the power to intervene when whales are being killed.

The Sea Shepherd’s ship, the Steve Irwin, is heading back to Melbourne to refuel but the Customs ship the Oceanic Viking is still in the region monitoring the fleet.

Greenpeace ship the Esperenza is also heading for port to refuel and Greenpeace says it has no plans to return to the Southern Ocean again this summer.

The Steve Irwin’s captain Paul Watson says there is no real point to the Oceanic Viking staying with the whaling fleet.

"The Australian Government vessel [Oceanic Viking] is still with the Japanese fleet but they’ll be leaving them in 10 days and of course they’re not really stopping them, they’re just taking pictures," he said.  [ABC News]

This just confirms what I have been saying over and over again that Australia’s claim over the Antarctic is dubious and they will not arrest the Japanese whalers because the Australian claim would not hold up in an international court.  The Oceanic Viking is out there solely to create the perception that the government is "doing something". 

So basically how this has all played out, is that Sea Shepherd got to become media heroes by assaulting Japanese whalers not to mention the increased funding they are sure to receive, Greenpeace likewise received a lot of media attention and probably increased funding as well, while the Australian government is credited with doing something with the Oceanic Viking taking pictures, and the Japanese will complete their whale hunt and go home.  Everybody wins while an international agreement to managing commercial whaling remains no where in the cards.

Further Reading:
Whaling is Not A Conservation Issue
The Clash Over Japanese Whaling

Happy Australia Day!

Today is Australia Day which celebrates the establishment of the first European settlement at Sydney Cove by CPT Arthur Phillip in 1788.  It is pretty much Australia’s equivalent of the US’s Independence Day.  In celebration of Australia Day Aussies have been posting YouTube videos expressing what they think Australia Day is about. 

This video here is really funny and I know I have been living in Australia for too long when I actually understand almost all of his Aussie slang:

Here is one that blames America for bringing its pop culture to Australia and ruining what Australia Day should be about:

I don’t like the hip hop rap culture either, but don’t blame the US for young people in Australia who choose to listen to and live that life style.  The guy does make some good points though that make for good food for thought. 

Speaking of food this guy is celebrating Australia Day the way it was meant to be celebrated, with a BBQ:

Happy Australia Day everyone!

Bodyguards “Cleared” the Ledger Scene?

The Heath Ledger story is getting stranger by the day with claims now being made that the Olsen twins bodyguards "cleared" the scene of Ledger’s death before the paramedics and police arrived.