The Man Without a Face - the mysterious rise of Vladimir Putin, in less than a decade, from low-ranking KGB nonentity to Kremlin master has been explored in detail in this book by journalist Masha Gessen. In Sydney, as a guest of the Sydney Writers Festival, Gessen presented a carefully researched, detailed analysis of the character of Putin, the impact he has on Russia and the many questions and shady elements of the Putin era. As a Russian American living in Moscow, Gessen is able to bring a focus on the way in which Putin perceives Russia and the influences and events which have shaped his perspective. His years as a KGB officer in particular left him with a sense of betrayal when 'Moscow was silent' and the Soviet Union ended. His propensity for absolute control stems from this experience. It is always extremely hazardous to write insightful material on Putin and his associates - the last guest of the Sydney Writers Festival in May 2006 who covered Russian politics, Russian journalist Anna Politkovskaya, was assassinated near her apartment in Moscow only five months later - a fact not lost on those attending the session with Gessen at the Sydney Theatre. Gessen's masterful and 'brave' book, as described by 'The Guardian' newspaper in the United Kingdom, will not have endeared her to the Putin Regime (while available worldwide, the book is not sold in the Russian language and only a single bookseller in Moscow has copies in English). With Putin under pressure in Russia, his efforts to silence critics may also be curtailed.
Saturday, 19 May 2012
Friday, 18 May 2012
Lock the Gate - Community Attitudes to Coal Seam Gas
Both the exploration and extraction of coal seam gas excites considerable reaction on local communities particularly farming townships and small rural settlements. Continued and vocal opposition has persisted within both the states of Queensland and New South Wales in Australia.
As one example, regional communities have joined with environmentalists to oppose unrestricted coal seam gas mining.
The 'Lock the Gate' movement is one such group and found at this link: http://lockthegate.org.au/
Around 7,000 people are reported to have rallied against coal seam gas mining in the town of Lismore and some 4,000 in Sydney outside the NSW Parliament in early May this year. This follows similar protests throughout 2011 particularly in the Illawarra region of NSW.
With the mining science so limited at this time in terms of hydrological impact and the use of fracking chemicals, the level of community alarm is both understandable and sensible. The adoption of a precautionary principle approach appears warranted if not essential for this mining method.
As one example, regional communities have joined with environmentalists to oppose unrestricted coal seam gas mining.
The 'Lock the Gate' movement is one such group and found at this link: http://lockthegate.org.au/
Around 7,000 people are reported to have rallied against coal seam gas mining in the town of Lismore and some 4,000 in Sydney outside the NSW Parliament in early May this year. This follows similar protests throughout 2011 particularly in the Illawarra region of NSW.
Illawarra protest in 2011 |
With the mining science so limited at this time in terms of hydrological impact and the use of fracking chemicals, the level of community alarm is both understandable and sensible. The adoption of a precautionary principle approach appears warranted if not essential for this mining method.
Thursday, 3 May 2012
Coal Seam Gas Inquiry Report - NSW Parliament - May 2012
Coal seam mining in Qld |
The Inquiry was particularly critical of of the lack of genuine community engagement noting that "community consultation appears to have been inconsistent, poorly timed and restrictive,.."The Inquiry also stated "that it cannot dismiss evidence that some operators have attempted to pressure landholders for access nor the possibility that companies may force access in the future.." In a damning indictment, the Inquiry found that a previously dismissed incident of the pollution of Pilliga Forest by Eastern Star Gas was, in fact, proven correct. Coal seam gas arguably is one of the most unknown mining methods with potentially enormous risks to both the environment and access to water for the community. With drilling occuring within Sydney's own aquifer system, the implementation of this report is an urgent priority.
The full report can be found at this link: http://bit.ly/IiFlfl
Monday, 30 April 2012
Climate change fatigue - community interest wanes
Coal Seam Gas and water impact
Condomine River - water contamination has been detected at this site |
Water contamination can occur in several ways - through the injection of chemicals via 'fracking'; or through chemicals that naturally exist in coal seams, being taken out and being exposed to other parts of the environment:; and potentially just from the removal of large quantities of water from aquifers or coal seams. A lateral flow of water and aquifers for example can be extremely damaging - aquifers actually differ in their water quality throughout their extent, so a lateral flow by itself can lead to changes in water quality including contamination from natural as well as introduced chemicals and substances.
Methane leaking into surrounding aquifers can occur naturally when there's a
close connection between the coal seams and the surrounding aquifers but it can also occur if the wells that go from the surface down into the
coal seam are not properly sealed. This has occured in a number of sites in Queensland. A similar related risk is if the fracturing of a coal seam extends out of the initial mining zone, such as into the surrounding geological strata. This type of event has occured in the United States with detrimental outcomes. The geological and engineering science of coal seam gas extraction remains full of serious gaps of knowledge - protection of water quality is arguably the highest priority.
Saturday, 21 April 2012
Renewable energy - can it power up ?
Wind turbines have proven successful |
Tuesday, 17 April 2012
Coal Seam Gas - to frack or not to frack ?
New research from the United States reporting that a steep rise in earthquakes across the central US
is likely to be man-made as a result of 'fracking' coal seam gas will do nothing to reassure Australians regarding the environmental safety of this method of gas extraction. The US Geological Survey found a sixfold increase in seismic activity was
particularly common in regions where waste water from fracking was injected
into deep wells. Similar findings were made in the United Kingdom last year, where experts found it ''highly probable'' that fracking was the
cause of 50 seismic events near Blackpool. This finding has been reaffirmed again this year, thus underlining the lack of sound research knowledge and information on this mining method.
CSG occurs in coal seams being predominantly methane
(CH4) but other gases may also be carbon dioxide (CO2), carbon monoxide (CO) and nitrogen. As water
usually saturates these seams, the CSG is extracted through the drilling of wells
into the coal, pumping the water out, thus releasing pressure to enable the
gas to be collected. Released gas is pushed by compressors to a central gas
processing facility then compressed/dried for transportation. CSG has risks for
negative environmental impact through:
- Large amounts of water by-product due to pumping from the coal seams and risk of arsenic contamination;
- The use of hydraulic fracturing (‘fracking’) in the production process (if the gas is tightly held) with possible effects on surface and ground water systems. Fracking uses carcinogenic/toxic BTEX group chemicals/fluids (ie benzene, toluene, etc).
- The potential leakage of methane gas during production and transportation (CH4 is a potent GHG gas if released).
CSG has alll the elements of a last ditch, desperate effort to locate new fossil fuel sources and should be seen in that light. It does not present a new safe form of energy nor at this time is it a safe intermediate energy source pending the uptake of greater renewable energy production.
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