The 4350water Blog highlights some of the issues relating to proposals for potable reuse in Toowoomba and South East Qld. 4350water blog looks at related political issues as well.

Tuesday, March 31, 2009

Anna Bligh caves in on departmental reform ...

The Bligh Government has baulked at adopting radical proposals to get rid of hundreds of statutory authorities and other public bodies despite being told the move would immediately save $18 million.

An independent review of more than 450 government organisations has recommended that 218 should be abolished, sold or merged with other bodies.

Bodies slated for abolition include the
Queensland Water Commission and Tourism Queensland.

The review, commissioned by Premier Anna Bligh last year, insisted its proposals were in the public interest.

But Premier Anna Bligh has stopped short of endorsing the recommendations, citing the impact it could have on jobs. She has instead ordered her ministers to consider its implications and report in a month.
...

See - Courier Mail - Call to slash bureaucracy not a priority, says Premier.

See the full list of authorities to be axed - Axe these authorities.

BrisConnections shaping up as a major embarassment for Anna Bligh's government ..

...
Wonate One wants the Victorian Supreme Court to order that a meeting of BrisConnections unitholders should go ahead on April 9 regardless of the outcome of the case between the toll road company and Mr Bolton.

The company, which is having part of its legal costs covered by Hugh McLernon's litigation funding company IMF under a pro-bono scheme, also wants an independent accountant appointed by the board to examine and report on BrisConnections' finances, so that unitholders can go into that meeting fully informed.

"It's highly likely the units have a negative value,'' Mr Sifris told the court.

"We submit that an independent party be appointed by the court to look at the debts, claims and liabilities of the responsible entity (BrisConnections).''

BrisConnections has begun construction of the biggest infrastructure project in the country, the $4.8 billion Airport Link project in Brisbane that already employs 1100 people. Such a report into its finances could find that the company is technically insolvent, especially if the next $1 per unit instalment is not paid.

Counsel for BrisConnections asked the court to strike out the application from Wonate One to join the proceedings.

After hearing both parties, Justice Ross Robson said the court `"guards jealously'' the rights of citizens who come before it to be heard.

"Mr Sifris contends that Wonate One seeks to be heard on behalf of mum-and-dad shareholders,'' Justice Robson said. "This court will not deny citizens that right.''

Wonate One will make its case on Thursday.

A separate trial, between Macquarie Group as plaintiff and BrisConnections and Australian Style as defendants, begins in Brisbane in the morning.


See - Sydney Morning Herald - BrisConn: mums and dads join the fight.

Purified recycled water - how to access it and what are the risks ...

Water Resource Law and Management

26 March 2009

Purified recycled water - how to access it and what are the risks?

With the completion of the advanced water treatment plant at Bundamba and the Eastern and Western Pipelines, there has been increasing interest in the use of purified recycled water (PRW) in the industrial, construction and rural industries to supplement the supply of potable water.

The supply of PRW to end users in South East Queensland is relatively new and this focus article seeks to provide guidance to potential end users, on the process for gaining access to PRW and, highlight issues end users need to consider when deciding whether PRW is a viable option.


See - McCullough Robertson - Purified recycled water - how to access it and what are the risks?

Kevin Rudd distances himself from China - picture opportunity PM didn't want ...

Which one is the Ambassador for China?

Brisbane Times - Photo - Andrew Meares.

Kevin Rudd normally loves to sit next to Chinese dignitaries and chit-chat in Mandarin. But with his China orientation now a matter of sharp political controversy, he seems to have lost some of his enthusiasm.

The Prime Minister's staff asked the BBC to move him from his position beside the Chinese ambassador to Britain, Madam Fu Ying, when the two appeared on the BBC's Andrew Marr Show at the weekend.
...

See - Brisbane Times - Picture opportunity PM didn't want.

The BBC refused to move Rudd.

He is not having fun with the UK media - finding them distinctly harder to manipulate ...

Monday, March 30, 2009

Anna Bligh's lobbyist register ...

See - Anna Bligh's lobbyist register - Who is on it.

PM Kevin Rudd cops blast from British press ...

A wave of ridicule greeted Kevin Rudd as he arrived in London for the G20 Summit yesterday. Not only has the Prime Minister been downgraded to "second tier status", the British media has dubbed him a boot-wearing geek from Down Under.

Ignoring the success of his visit to the US and talks with President Barack Obama, they instead chose to dredge up everything from his New York strip club fiasco in 2003 to petty sniping about his clothes.

One newspaper described Mr Rudd's style as being "a charisma-free zone" and said he was best known for "a drunken trip to a strip club".


See - British press attacks Prime Minister Kevin Rudd on eve of G20.

What?  The PM's spin team can't deal with the British press ...

Purple pipe recycled water - Port Macquarie achieves what Toowoomba can't ...

Plant upgrade promises more recycled wastewater

The Port Macquarie Hastings Council says a major upgrade to its Lake Cathie Bonny Hills sewage treatment plant will result in more available recycled treated wastewater.

The council's Jeff Sharp says a new pipeline is being built, linking the plant with Port Macquarie.

He says the so-called 'purple pipeline' will make recycled water available for irrigation purposes in Port Macquarie and also for the Camden Haven golf course.

Mr Sharp says the provision of state-of-the-art microfiltration at the plant will ensure the high quality of the wastewater.

"People's perception, now that we have a resource there and rather than just discharging to the environment through any number of different means ... [is] that we can come up with markets and beneficial end users," he said.

"It is a really important step forward for us all, I believe, and many in the community see it that way."


See - Plant upgrade promises more recycled wastewater.

Sunday, March 29, 2009

As cities wilt, most major water projects are delayed ...

Most of Melbourne's major water projects have been postponed or delayed despite the continued water supply crisis, an assessment by the Essential Services Commission has found.

The State Government has blamed the drought for its failure to deliver the bulk of water projects in Melbourne, Geelong, Ballarat and Bendigo last year.

The commission recently assessed the Government's progress on 37 major water projects and found 28 had been delayed. These include new pipes, sewerage upgrades, odour abatement and water recycling.

Water projects 'not needed' ...

The controversial $750 million north-south pipeline is unnecessary and the desalination plant could have been avoided with greater efforts to cut water use, according to top-level advice delivered to the State Government just weeks before both projects were announced.

The advice was contained in a secret, cabinet-commissioned water plan delivered to ministers early in June 2007.

Two weeks later, the Government revealed its $4.9 million water plan, including the Wonthaggi desalination plant and north-south pipeline.

Saturday, March 28, 2009

QIC and their investment in Australia's most toxic float - BrisConnections ...

For more than a week Nicholas Bolton has sat in the middle of a crowded courtroom while the legal maelstrom of his creation swirled around him.

The shaggy-haired Melbourne University drop-out, who once worked on the visual effects for the film Scooby-Doo, has sat fiddling with an iPhone and swapping notes with an assistant while coming to legal blows with some of the biggest names in corporate Australia.


See - Brisbane Times - Why BrisConnections has courted battle with unit holders.

Qld LNP - "we see dead people" ...

See - LNP claims dead people voted Labor in Queensland election.

Once a Labor voter, always a Labor voter - even after death it seems ...

Foreign Minister Joel Fitzgibbon - the skinny on his Chinese government-linked gal pal ...

Helen Liu, the Chinese born millionaire and close friend and landlady of Defence Minister Joel Fitzgibbon is the daughter of a senior Communist Party official and former provincial governor.

The Courier-Mail can also reveal that Mr Fitzgibbon was repaying a $20,000 campaign debt when he flew to China to assist Ms Liu to clinch some business deals on his wife Dianne's birthday, Christmas Day in 2002.

Ms Liu had donated $20,000 to his campaign fund for his first election in 1996 from a total of $90,000 given to the ALP.

The strong friendship between a government minister and the daughter of a Communist Party official was bound to ring alarm bells inside Canberra's shadowy spy community.
...

Funding a struggling new MP's election campaigns to the tune of $20,000 buys a lot of favours, including Mr Fitzgibbon's two-day dashes to Shanghai and Beijing to help her win some business deals.
...


See - Courier Mail - Joel Fitzgibbon trip to repay campaign funds donation.

Aah, politics ...

Friday, March 27, 2009

Global recession ends Kevin Rudd's carbon emission scheme plans ...

Kevin Rudd has warned that the global recession is cutting the chance of achieving a new global consensus on climate change at a crucial meeting in Copenhagen later this year.

See - Global financial crisis to slow climate progress: Rudd.

How Anna Bligh turns 23 Departments into (wait for it) 23 Departments ...

Under the public service changes, Queensland's previous system of 23 departments with 23 directors-general will be rationalised to 13 departments with 10 sub-departments.

See - The Australian - Anna Bligh's team lean, mean and now ready to govern.

Amazing!

Thursday, March 26, 2009

Anna Bligh set out her new government departments ...

Saving $200 million a year without sacking anyone but needing to reorganise office space, websites, stationery etc etc.

It's Super Premier Anna.

The new departments are:

- Premier and Cabinet
- Treasury
- Health
- Employment and Economic Development
- Infrastructure and Planning
- Transport and Main Roads
- Environment and Resource Management
- Communities
- Education and Training
- Justice and Attorney-General
- Police
- Community Safety, and
- Public Works.

See - Brisbane Times - Bligh cluster bombs departments.

What's left of the QWC will presumably be folded into Environment and Resource Management ...

Anna Bligh the magician - evaporating 10 government depts with no job losses ...

Anna Bligh trims 10 of 23 public service departments

Queensland Premier Anna Bligh is to cut the number of government departments from 23 to 13 in a major overhaul of the public service.
...

She told reporters later a second tier of her plan to renew government was to trim the number of departments by 10, in six cluster areas.

But she said public servants' jobs would be guaranteed.
...

See - Anna Bligh trims 10 of 23 public service departments.

The QWC staff are getting nervous ...

Former Toowoomba Mayor's house still for sale ...

20 months on the market and counting ...

Which Anna Bligh Minister will be the first to screw up ...

... odds are it will be the Minister for Drunk Driving and now Minister for Slapping ...

The new state Cabinet minister under investigation over an alleged election day assault had been forced to apologise over a previous incident.

Karen Struthers, who will be sworn in today as Minister for Community Services, Housing and Women at Government House, physically attacked another Labor MP in 2004.

The Courier-Mail has learnt Ms Struthers narrowly avoided a police complaint after Premier Peter Beattie intervened at the 11th hour to broker peace.

The revelation comes after Ms Struthers was accused of slapping Family First candidate Stephen Christian at a school polling booth on Saturday.

Ms Struthers has rejected the claims while Premier Anna Bligh has supported her newly-endorsed minister as she has witnesses backing her story, including an off-duty police officer wearing a pink Anna4Qld T-shirt.

Police are currently investigating the allegations and are seeking witnesses.

The 2004 incident occurred the day before the federal election and involved then Labor MP for Indooroopilly, Ronan Lee.
...


See - Courier Mail - Slapping claim dogs new minister.

At least Anna Bligh won't be able to say she didn't see it coming ...

Elizabeth Nosworthy's QWC targeted by Anna Bligh's razor gang ...

More than 450 government boards and statutory authorities in Queensland have been told to justify their existence or face the axe.
...

Bodies under the microscope range from the Queensland Water Commission to the Babinda Swamp Drainage Board.

Tuesday, March 24, 2009

Kerry Shine axed from A-G Ministry for former ALP State Secretary Milton Dick's brother ...

... but Anna Bligh got to choose her own Cabinet.

See - First time MP Cameron Dick takes over A-G from Kerry Shine.

Expect Kerry Shine to retire at the next State election ...

Anna Bligh's Cabinet reshuffle - Stephen Robertson and QWC's Elizabeth Nosworthy - a match made in heaven ...

Stephen Robertson becomes the new Minister for Natural Resources, Mines and Energy and Minister for Trade.


Presumably this means a combination of the Department of Natural Resources and Water and the Department of Minies and Energy.

QWC is expected to be folded into DNRW although there were references on the campaign trail to it being recycled into the Department of Primary Industries and Fisheries.

Health was a complete basket case under Robertson.   So good luck to these Departments.

We'll see how long it is before Elizabeth Nosworthy is shuffled out the back door ...

Anna Bligh's complete list of Ministers ...

The full list is:

Anna Bligh – Premier, Minister for the Arts

Paul Lucas – Deputy Premier and Minister for Health

Andrew Fraser – Treasurer and Minister for Employment and Economic Development

Robert Schwarten – Minister for Public Works and Information and Communication Technology

Stephen Robertson – Minister for Natural Resources, Mines and Energy and Minister for Trade

Geoff Wilson – Minister for Education and Training

Neil Roberts – Minister for Police, Corrective Services and Emergency Services

Tim Mulherin – Minister for Primary Industries, Fisheries and Rural and Regional Queensland

Craig Wallace – Minister for Main Roads

Desley Boyle – Minister for Local Government and Aboriginal and Torres Strait Island Partnerships

Sterling Hinchliffe – Minister for Infrastructure and Planning

Rachel Nolan – Minister for Transport

Cameron Dick – Attorney-General and Minister for Industrial Relations

Karen Struthers – Minister for Community Services and Housing and Minister for Women

Kate Jones – Minister for Climate Change and Sustainability

Annastacia Palaszczuk – Minister for Disability Services and Multicultural Affairs

Peter Lawlor – Minister for Tourism and Fair Trading

Phil Reeves – Minister for Child Safety and Minister for Sport


See - Anna Bligh's Cabinet.

Anna Bligh's new Minister for Community Services, Housing, Women and Drunk Driving ...

25 August 2007

Senior Queensland Government backbencher Karen Struthers has been arrested for drink-driving at more than three times the legal limit.

Ms Struthers, 44, the Parliamentary Secretary for Health, was driving a government vehicle when she was picked up by police late on Friday night in south Brisbane and gave a blood alcohol reading of .169.
...

"I am not making any excuses. I probably had four drinks . . . but that is not a good reading at all," she said.


See - MP Karen Struthers 'a bloody idiot'.

Also see - Bligh's new line-up revealed.

That was more than three times the limit on four drinks or was it four bottles?

Pull the other one, it comes with a Ministry ....

Anna Bligh's former A-G Kerry Shine falls on his sword - heads to backbench ...

Caucus wars.

Expect Kerry Shine to retire at the next election at age 62.

Former Attorney-General Kerry Shine this morning told Premier Anna Bligh he did not want a Cabinet spot, giving her an eighth vacancy after Judy Spence, John Mickel, Lindy Nelson-Carr and Margaret Keech were dumped yesterday.

Former Ministers Rod Welford and Warren Pitt retired at the election while former Environment Minister Andrew McNamara lost his seat.

The new faces are Stafford MP Stirling Hinchliffe, Ashgrove MP Kate Jones, Southport MP Peter Lawlor, Ipswich MP Rachel Nolan, Inala MP Annastacia Palaszczuk, Mansfield MP Phil Reeves and Algester MP Karen Struthers.


See - Courier Mail - Anna Bligh picks new Cabinet.

Anna Bligh selects new Ministry ...

See - Courier Mail - First time MP given ministry in Bligh government.

Anna Bligh carves her Left faction knife through Cabinet to settle old scores ...

Renewal or revenge ...

Judy Spence out of Cabinet as Anna Bligh gets square

 24 March 2009

Premier Anna Bligh has moved instantly to settle an eight-year-old factional score by dumping the strife-prone police minister Judy Spence.

Ms Spence was one of four to be given their ministerial marching orders yesterday as part of a mass cleanout of the Cabinet as Ms Bligh attempts to put a fresh face on her Government.

It is understood Ms Bligh's Left faction has long harboured ambitions of getting rid of Ms Spence after she defected to the Labor Unity faction after Labor's first term in office.

At the time the Left were planning to dump the under-performing Ms Spence from the ministry but she retained her position by switching to then premier Peter Beattie's faction.
...

For the full article see - Courier Mail - Judy Spence out of Cabinet as Anna Bligh gets square.

Monday, March 23, 2009

Brisbane City Council claims Anna Bligh will privatise water ...

All it takes is a simple phone call to Brisbane City Council to discuss water charges and they'll tell you that things will all change as soon as SEQ water is privatised.

If the Council knows it will happen, and plenty of residents think it will happen, all that remains is for Anna Bligh to complete the aggregation of water and sewage assets (the appointment of the new Toowoomba Regional Council CEO may assist with this) and announce her privatisation plans.

She will have to mollify the unions (Anna Bligh's Chief of Staff, Mike Kaiser, jumped ship from Morris Iemma's office just as he was touting his power privatisation plans) but Anna Bligh will claim she has an electoral mandate to complete this.

The reality is that, without the privatisation of water and sewage, it's going to be hard to chip away at Qld's $74 billion (and rising) debt ...

Astronaut urine recycler has problems ...

A glitch with the space urine recycler aboard the International Space Station on Sunday delayed a vital test for a system that converts astronaut urine back into drinking water.

See - Astronaut urine recycler has problems.

Even in space ...

Sunday, March 22, 2009

Anna Bligh claims historic win in Queensland election ...

See - Sunday Mail - Anna Bligh claims historic win in Queensland election.

Also see - Sunday Mail - Qld election - seat by seat.

Saturday, March 21, 2009

Anna Bligh wins Qld State election ...

Friday, March 20, 2009

Qld State election - don't waste your vote ...

See - Courier Mail - Don't waste your vote.

Toowoomba Regional Council places faith in cashed-up CEO ...

Council places faith in cashed-up CEO

20 March 2009

Toowoomba Regional council’s new boss left his last CEO position with a reported $500,000 redundancy payout.

Ken Gouldthorp’s appointment was announced yesterday, one year after he departed Mackay City Council with a controversial golden handshake.

The city’s newspaper, The Daily Mercury, called him
"Cashed-up Ken" when he walked away with two years’ salary after deciding not to apply for CEO of the amalgamated council.

The 46-year-old starts pocketing his estimated $300,000 a year Toowoomba pay packet in late April.

He will arrive five months after former CEO Philip Spencer resigned in November with a rumoured $500,000 payout.

Mr Gouldthorp didn’t return The Chronicle’s call yesterday.
Mayor Peter Taylor refused to comment on the redundancy clause in the CEO package.

"There is nothing extreme in the five-year contract," he said.

...

See - The Chronicle - Council places faith in cashed-up CEO.

Toowoomba Regional Council's new CEO - 'cashed-up Ken' Gouldthorp comes to town ...

Cashed-up Ken's new job: You're paying him again

21 May 2008

Former Mackay City Council CEO Ken Gouldthorp, flush with funds from his fat redundancy payout, has landed a plum job at SunWater.

Mr Gouldthorp, who walked away with two years' salary in March after deciding not to seek the CEO's job on the new regional council, today starts work as general manager (water services) for the Queensland Government-owned corporation.

He will again team up with former Mackay City Council Mayor Julie Boyd, who is a board member at SunWater.

Mr Gouldthorp, who was on a package of around $270,000 a year at the council, has jumped straight into another six-figure job.

Mackay people will once again be propping up his salary, as council receives a water allotment each year from SunWater paid for by ratepayers.

Mr Gouldthorp, whose relocation to Brisbane was funded by Mackay ratepayers, could not be reached for comment yesterday.

Ms Boyd was heavily criticised after council delegated her responsibility to negotiate Mr Gouldthorp's contract in December 2006.

Councillors had already agreed to the salary and terms of his contract.

It was during those negotiations that Mr Gouldthorp, who signed a new five-year contract, had the two-year redundancy included in the deal.

Mr Gouldthorp was interim CEO of Mackay Regional Council when he decided to take the money.

He was appointed Mackay City Council chief executive in February 2003.

Large sections of the community were livid he managed to secure a two-year payout for five years' work.

Councillor Dave Perkins said he wished Mr Gouldthorp all the best in his new job.

"He's qualified, he's gone for the job and he got it good luck to him," he said.

"I guess he'll have a fair bit to do in this neck of the woods because of our water situation up here."

Mr Gouldthorp will no doubt be happy to work with Ms Boyd again.

The duo were a formidable, and at times controversial, double act on the council.

Ms Boyd receives $25,000 a year as a SunWater board member. Four days after finishing her 11-year reign as mayor, she was named Queensland's special trade representative to Japan, South Korea and the Philippines a $60,000 a year part-time, taxpayer-funded gig.

SunWater advertised for Mr Gouldthorp's job on April 5. SunWater is a leading water industry company providing bulk water supply services to more than 6000 customers.


See - Daily Mercury - Cashed-up Ken's new job: You're paying him again.

Toowoomba Regional Council's new CEO - what you don't know ...

It's time to end council secrecy

11 March 2008

If you wanted to highlight the failings of the current council you need look no further than the debacle of City of Mackay CEO's enormous redundancy package of two years' pay.

What is most astounding about the payout for Ken Gouldthorp who is on a package of about $270,000 a year is that councillors did not know the details of the redundancy clause in his contract.

When they voted on the CEO's package in December 2006, councillors were briefed on his salary and length of the contract but not on the redundancy clause entitling him to two years' pay.

The people of this region deserve better than that and when they go to the polls this Saturday to elect a new regional council, voters should elect those who believe in and will fight for open government.

The councillors are our elected representatives. What is the point in having them if they are not openly and actively given all the information they need to make decisions?

Yesterday, five councillors signed and circulated a document that accused other councillors of turning the redundancy payout into a "political stunt". Sorry, but the people of this region do not think the debate about the redundancy payout is a political stunt. The councillors who signed the document are: Greg Thomsen, Kevin Casey, Alison Jones, Joan Byers and Dave Perkins.

David Kidd signed the document but later withdrew his signature. All of them also voted in support of Mr Gouldthorp's redundancy last week. (Mr Thomsen is the one councillor who says he had been told earlier about the two-year redundancy deal.)

The three councillors they were accusing are Don Rolls, George Christensen and Troy Johnston.

What is disappointing about those who signed yesterday's document all of whom except Byers are standing for the new Mackay Regional Council is that they want to continue the sort of bickering that destroyed the previous council.

Instead of fighting for open government and a better flow of information, they want to continue a fight that the people of Mackay became sick of years ago.

Voters want a change to effective, constructive, open government. We deserve better than more of the same from Perkins, Thomsen, Casey and Jones.


See - Daily Mercury - CEO had hidden redundancy clause.

Here we go again ...

Toowoomba Regional Council appoints new CEO ...

Hopefully, he might last longer than the last one.

Council announces next CEO

20 March 2009

The former Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of Mackay City Council and current General Manager Water Services at Sunwater is the next Toowoomba Regional Council CEO.

Ken Gouldthorp’s appointment was unanimously endorsed at a special meeting of the council today (March 20). The CEO will be employed on a five year contract and will take up the position in late April.
...


See - Toowoomba Regional Council appoints new CEO.

Thursday, March 19, 2009

Courier Mail editorial - Anna Bligh is out of touch and out of time ...

The Courier-Mail believes that real wealth and jobs come from government getting out of the way of the private sector. On this count alone, the LNP wins this newspaper's endorsement in tomorrow's election.

See - Labor Party is out of touch and out of time.

Springborg and the LNP offer to block Anna Bligh's recycled water into Wivenhoe plan ...

Highlights of LNP's ClimateProof SEQ Water Policy:

The South East’s water needs will be met through an innovative mix of technologies that will see harsh water restrictions permanently removed. This environmentally sound strategy includes:

• Implementing the Water Innovation Fund to financially assist businesses, community groups and large residential developments in harvesting rain and stormwater

• New technologies and incentives to help households maximise their rainwater catchment, with ongoing rebates for water tanks and water saving devices

• A desalination plant at Bribie Island

• Directing recycled water to power stations, industry and agriculture, not into drinking supplies

• Abandoning plans for Traveston Crossing Dam and its dependant Northern Pipeline Interconnector Stage 2.


See - LNP ClimateProof SEQ Water Policy.

Anna Bligh QWC appointee Elizabeth Nosworthy weaves another basket case ...

Nosworthy weaves another basket case

20 March 2009

What is that rule in baseball? Three strikes and you're out?

It's a question that is no doubt running through the mind of Elizabeth Nosworthy, who may have cemented her role as t
he public face of corporate basket cases after a third company for which she acts as a director was placed in the hands of administrators.

Ventracor, the publicly listed medical device maker, yesterday joined investment bank Babcock & Brown and Commander Communications, which are also being cared for by the corporate doctors. It's quite an achievement for just seven months work.

The Brisbane lawyer has been a non-executive director of Ventracor since July 2002.

She joined the Babcock & Brown board at the time of its 2004 listing and was promoted to the chairman's role last August as the bank tottered under $50 billion worth of debt.

Nobody there seemed bothered by the fact that Nosworthy had only weeks before handed Commander, a junior telecommunications player she'd presided over for the past five years, to an administrator.

The three roles have netted the 62-year-old hundreds of thousands of dollars in directors fees.
...

Despite h
er career as a public company director seemingly being in tatters, Nosworthy's role as chair of the Queensland Water Commission appears to be safe -- for now.

Facing a state election, Queensland Premier Anna Bligh last month said the commission's board, including Ms Nosworthy, would remain in place.

...

For the full article see - The Australian - Nosworthy weaves another basket case.

Expect Nosworthy to be quietly shuffled out the back door of the QWC once merged with DNRW if Anna Bligh wins on Saturday.

Galaxy Poll shows swing against Anna Bligh and Labor at Queensland election ...

See - Courier Mail - Galaxy Poll shows swing against Labor at Queensland election.

Recycled sewage struggles with yuk factor ...

Recycled sewage struggles with yuk factor

19 March 2009

ISTANBUL (AFP) — One day, when you read on a drink bottle "this water has been passed by the minister of health," the message may be open to interpretation in more ways than one.

To a corps of hydrologists, the only way that parched regions of the world can meet the surging demand for water is to recycle -- and use -- the stuff that has already been through the human body.

Rather than throwing away water that results from treating urine, faeces and bathwater, the valuable liquid can be harnessed once more, they say.

It could go not just for farm irrigation or industry -- as is already widely the case in many countries -- but also for drinking water.

Presentations at the World Water Forum, running in Istanbul until Sunday, have been pressing the argument that "used" water, also called rather more gracefully "grey" water, should comprise a percentage of what comes out of our taps.

But specialists also caution that overcoming human repugnance -- could it be called a gut response? -- is a far greater challenge than the engineering.

"People hate the idea of drinking something that could have been sewage," said Gerard Payen, a member of the UN's consultative committee on water and sanitation, which reports to Secretary General Ban Ki-moon.

"There's a major psychological block. But it will go away bit by bit."
Windhoek, the capital of the arid southern African country of Namibia, has been using a "toilets-to-taps" system with success for many years.

But it's a rare example of public acceptance to date.

In Australia, inhabitants of the Queensland town of Toowoomba voted out of introducing such a scheme in a referendum three years ago. In other parts of the drought-wracked country, the idea encounters a shake of the head, but is at least being taken seriously as an option.

"Technically, using modern recycling methods, we are able to turn out water that is perfectly drinkable," explained Antoine Frerot, managing director of Veolia Eau, a French water company that has high stakes in this sector.

"Used water is a resource that is close to cities and its availability rises at the same rate of consumption," he said. "Recycling it uses less energy than desalination and avoids pollution."

According to Frerot's figures, drinking water extracted from an aquifer costs around 10 euro cents (eight US cents) per cubic metre and 70 euro cents (56 US cents) when taken from sea water.

Somewhere in between is recycled used water, at 45 euro cents (36 US cents) a cubic metre.

Faced with public suspicions, water companies are looking at indirect ways of water conservation. They include separation of drinking water and toilet systems, so that sea water can be used to flush toilets.

Another widespread practice is "indirect" sewage recycling. In other words, the sewage, once cleaned by treatment, is poured out into the local river or reservoir, which is drawn up by a different intake pipe as the source for drinking water.

This has been the practice for many years on the River Thames, for instance, where local utilities upstream extract and return the water several times before it reaches London.

Singapore, a groundbreaker in reuse, has a programme called NEWater, in which one percent of drinking water comes from recycled sewage effluent, which is added to the city-state's main reservoir.

"Passing the water through a 'natural environment' is a way of partially overcoming the psychological barrier and also brings in the ecosystem as an additional filter," said Jacques Labre, a specialist with Suez Environnement, a French water services company.

"The psychological barrier is still quite strong, but I think it will change in the future. It's a lot about trust in the technology," said Louise Korsgaard, an expert with Danish consultancy DHI and a researcher at Singapore's Nanyang Technical University.


See - Recycled sewage struggles with yuk factor.

Labor's internal polls show Anna Bligh in trouble ...

Labor polling tips LNP

19 March 2009

Internal Labor polling has the Liberal National Party on course for an upset victory in Saturday's Queensland election.

The Australian understands the track polling - the nightly results of small sample sizes spread across key electorates - has revealed swings of as much as 8 to 10 per cent in electorates held by 6 to 8 per cent. This is the band of seats Labor must hold on to if it is to win a fifth term.

Seats around Brisbane including Redcliffe, Broadwater and Southport are all tracking badly for the ALP, as are several southwest Queensland and inner-city Brisbane electorates.

The LNP needs to gain 18 seats from Labor with a large uniform swing of 7.6 per cent to deprive Labor of its majority.

Labor strategists are rushing campaign workers into the electorates under threat, even flying operatives in from interstate, in a last-minute attempt to turn around local fortunes.

Labor's track polling was continuing last night.
It is understood the internal polling shows a collapse in Greens preferences flowing Labor's way as voters indicate their intention to take advantage of Queensland's system of optional preferential voting by placing a "1" next to the Green candidate without preferencing down the line.

Such a protest vote - the internal polling reveals the Green vote is more than 8 per cent - would hurt Labor candidates who rely on a steady flow of Greens preferences.
...

The Australian - Labor polling tips LNP.

Leaked polling data or purposely leaked polling data ...

Anna Bligh's election chances - around the traps ...

The Australian - Labor polling tips LNP.

Westside News - Qld voters won’t return Bligh: survey.

Crikey - Bligh campaign implodes days before poll.

Brisbane Times - Parties to show voters the money.

The Australian - I'll pick my cabinet, Anna Bligh insists.

We'll see on Saturday ...

Anna Bligh QWC appointee Elizabeth Nosworthy's latest company to hit the skids - Ventracor ...

... goes into administration.

See - Sydney Morning Herald - Ventracor in administration.

From Ventracor website:

Elizabeth has held a number of Directorships in both the private and the public sectors. She is currently Chairman of the Queensland Water Commission, Commander Communications Ltd and Babcock and Brown Ltd and an Adjunct Professor of Law at the University of Queensland.

Commander Communications, Babcock and Brown and Ventracor have all gone to their corporate graves.  And her time at the QWC seems limited regardless of who wins the Qld State election on Saturday.

It leaves the UQ gig at least ...

Wednesday, March 18, 2009

LNP Trevor Watts takes on Anna Bligh's AG Kerry Shine in Toowoomba North ...

A tall ask to unseat Kerry Shine perhaps. Not many candidates are better at grassroots campaigning.



Apparently, Trevor will get the Toowoomba Bypass built.

Toowoomba voters are probably tired of the long line of politicians saying "vote for me ... I'll get the Bypass built" ...

Toowoomba Regional Council seeks 1 million signatures for Bypass petition - gets 27,500 ...

Perhaps a little optimistic to start with.

See - Toowoomba Regional Council - Toowoomba Bypass petition to be tabled.

Also see - The Chronicle - A million signatures new target.

Anna Bligh tells Tourism Minister Desley Boyle to toe the line ...

You would have been able to see the steam rising over Anna's electorate overnight as she saw Desley Boyle's comments.

Anna Bligh to get her own way on Cabinet - Desley Boyle

18 March 2009

A Queensland minister who claimed caucus, not the Premier, would choose who was in a next Labor Cabinet has backflipped.
...

However, in a statement today, Ms Boyle said she had accepted the Premier would pick her own Cabinet team.

"The Premier has the authority to hand-pick her team," she said.

"While things have been done differently in the past, I know Anna Bligh and I know she is determined to deliver good, strong government for the people of Queensland and that means she will choose her own frontbench if re-elected."

See - Courier Mail - Anna Bligh to get her own way on Cabinet - Desley Boyle.

Qld election - Anna Bligh facing power struggle with Tourism Minister ...

Anna Bligh's leadership has been undermined by one of her own ministers vowing the Premier will not get her own way in a future cabinet reshuffle.

Tourism Minister Desley Boyle yesterday broke ranks and contradicted Ms Bligh's claims Labor's re-election would give her a mandate for "serious renewal" in her ministerial line-up.

In an interview with The Courier-Mail, Ms Boyle insisted the Labor caucus would choose who departed and stayed in cabinet ranks and not Ms Bligh.
...


See - Courier Mail - Anna Bligh facing power struggle.

If Anna Bligh wins, she may not even remain as Leader ...

Tuesday, March 17, 2009

Anna Bligh's election boffins judge her chances ...

ABC's Catalyst program recycles Anna Bligh's recycled water ...

QWC's John Bradley is very careful with his words.  He won't say there's no risk with drinking recycled water - just that it 'poses no additional risk'.

Catalyst - Water Recycling


12 March 2009

TRANSCRIPT

NARRATION:
You’d expect a microbiologist’s pool to be pretty clean.

Dr Helen Stratton:
The water looks good, doesn’t it, which is just as well.

NARRATION:
Like any mum, Helen Stratton wouldn’t let her kids near water that might make them sick.

Dr Helen Stratton:
In actual fact, I took them out of the swim lessons because I wasn’t happy with the water quality.

NARRATION:
Keeping an eye on the kids goes beyond pool safety. Helen’s one of many Queensland scientists working to ensure the safety of drinking water recycled from treated sewage.

Dr Helen Stratton:
I think this idea of toilet to tap is a really bad misconception, it’s way past that. The water will be cleaner than any of the water ever going into the dam.

NARRATION:
But not all microbiologists agree that the technology is safe.

Prof Peter Collignon:
If you use water as your source from sewage you’re starting off with a thousand to a million times higher concentration of viruses, bacteria and probably drugs than it is even in a polluted river. So you’re starting off with a much more dangerous water source.

Dr Helen Stratton:
We’ve had a hundred years of protecting public health by making sure we have clean drinking water. Now we’re not about to undo that.

Snow Manners:
We don’t know what it is that we don’t know about. There is destruction confronting us, therefore we must drink from the sewers.

NARRATION:
It’s a public debate about science that hasn’t changed since 2006…

Woman in Toowoomba:
Toilet water is toilet water, dam water I don’t think has ever been toilet water ever, so, yeah…

NARRATION:
…when I visited my hometown of Toowoomba, the first city to vote on water recycling.

Mark Horstman:
Mr Berghofer, the yes campaign says that science was the loser today, so who won?

Clive Berghofer:
Oh come on, no, come on.

Snow Manners:
The community does not need to know anything about the science.

NARRATION:
Despite a 60 percent vote against it, Toowoomba can now plug into a brand new water recycling scheme that covers all of south-east Queensland.

John Bradley:
There’s been a nine billion dollar investment in interconnecting pipelines and desalination and recycled water technology. It’s certainly massive, and probably it’s only comparable project is the Snowy Mountains scheme.

NARRATION:
At full capacity, water recycling can purify more than 200 million litres every day, using secondary treated waste from six sewage treatment plants.

Troy Walker:
We measure about 350 contaminants in the treated water. We wanted to target our testing on the sorts of things that we found were coming into the plant to be treated in the first place…pharmaceuticals, herbicides, pesticides, microbiological contaminants, and even radionuclides.

Usually all of these nasties end up in our rivers for others to drink downstream.

Keith Davies:
The water that used to go into the rivers and the bay is our feedstock, that’s our inflow. And we take that water and take out the contaminants.

NARRATION:
What makes this advanced water treatment plant different are the three extra steps it adds to the existing treatment process.

Mark Horstman:
What’s happening in these pipes?

Keith Davies: This is our microfiltration unit. This is barrier 3 of the 7 barrier process.

NARRATION:
Each tube is packed with thousands of fine hollow fibres that filter out tiny particles and most microbes.

Keith Davies:
Under very great pressure the water is forced through those tubes. They have holes in them 1/300 the size of a human hair, and this takes out the particulates.

NARRATION:
Only then is the filtered water ready to enter the reverse osmosis tubes, the most important part of the process.

Keith Davies: This technology is basically the same technology that’s used in desalination.

NARRATION:
At its core are membranes so thin that a stack of five thousand of them would be only one millimetre thick. They’re bound into stacks, interleaved with spaces for water to flow through, and rolled tightly into cylinders. Spiralled inside these fifty tubes are more than a hectare of membranes. They’re not like sieves with tiny holes. Rather the membranes work like a massive artificial kidney, drawing water out of the passing waste stream.

Keith Davies:
Water diffuses through the membrane to come out as hydrogen and oxygen basically.

Mark Horstman:
That must take a lot of pressure?

Keith Davies:
It does take a lot of pressure. This is the highest powered part of the plant.

NARRATION:
Down at the atomic level, water molecules are attracted to the membranes and pushed through by up to 20 atmospheres of pressure. But viruses can only get through if there is a hole in the membrane. To guarantee safety, the system is designed for overkill.

Troy Walker:
Not very much can go wrong, to be honest. Most of the system is automated.

NARRATION:
It’s when things do go wrong that worries Professor Collignon.

Prof Peter Collignon:
My main concern is that it may not remove all the viruses in particular but other germs and also all the drugs we need to make it safe for people to drink all the time.

Prof Peter Collignon:
Trust me I’m an engineer is worse than trust me I’m a doctor.

Mark Horstman:
Trust me I’m a microbiologist?

Prof Peter Collignon:
Trust me, I’m a microbiologist.

Mark Horstman:
Have you done your own research, your own testing of this kind of water?

Prof Peter Collignon:
No we don’t. Because we’re not that sort of laboratory.

NARRATION:
This is the lab in Queensland that does. For more than a year, a small scientific army has been testing samples from the advanced water treatment plants for chemicals, microbes, and viruses.

John Bradley: The people that are actually doing research in this area have concluded that this poses no additional risk to our community.

NARRATION:
In addition to this work, Helen Stratton’s university research is developing more rapid techniques to measure pathogens in water.

Dr Helen Stratton: I’m really comfortable as a microbiologist – and I’m quite paranoid about what I drink and what I eat – I will be drinking the water.

NARRATION:
But there’s plenty of doubt about that, out in the suburbs.

Man with 5 kids:
Nuh. Just doesn’t make any sense to me. Anyone that feeds their kids water like that, got rocks in their heads mate.

Woman:
I don’t really like the idea of drinking it very much.

Brothers and sister:
Not much we can really do. Yeah. I guess you put your life in their hands really.

Mark Horstman:
This is the Wivenhoe Dam, where much of south-east Queensland gets its drinking water from, and it’s at the centre of the recycled water debate. Now as you can see right now it’s only about a third full. And even though there’s up to one hundred million litres of pure water that’s ready to be pumped into here every day, while there’s public opposition to the plan, the water’s just not going to flow.

NARRATION:
Heavy rains have eased the drought, and topped up the water supplies. So the government decided to add recycled water to the dam only in emergencies – for now.

Dr Helen Stratton:
It’s not about switching it on or off. I think we need to make the decision to do it or not to do it. The government has agreed that it's a safe process.

NARRATION:
And that’s the key issue. The treatment plant has to reduce viruses by at least a billion times, or in mathematical terms, by log 9.

Prof. Peter Collignon:
To achieve safety from a viral point of view we’ve got to get to log 9 or more.

NARRATION:
To put it another way, the chance that a virus is left behind is one in a billion.

Prof. Peter Collignon:
If we look at log 9 which is a billion-fold reduction that represents a 99.9999999 reduction. In other words…

Mark Horstman:
…percent reduction?

Prof. Peter Collignon:
…percent reduction. Which sounds very impressive. But that’s the sort of reduction we have to achieve all the time.

NARRATION:
That’s exactly why at the advanced treatment plant, they monitor the performance of each stage every second.

Troy Walker:
This is one of our critical control points for the plants. It gives us an idea of how intact the membranes are, it gives us a guarantee.

Mark Horstman:
What happens if there’s a tear in the membrane, and it goes above a certain level?

Troy Walker: If this level goes above our critical level, it will raise an alarm, and shut the plant down.

Mark Horstman:
Immediately?

Troy Walker:
Immediately.

NARRATION:
Even if the alarms do go off, any lingering viruses or toxics still have to get past a lethal combination of hydrogen peroxide and ultraviolet radiation.

Keith Davies:
The intensity of the UV is somewhere around 300 times that of the sun. This is a very similar technology to what’s used in the medical industry for sterilisation.

Mark Horstman:
What can survive?

Keith Davies:
Nothing can survive this.

NARRATION:
What they have to achieve is the national target for recycled water safety – that’s log 9.5 reduction of viruses. Data provided to Catalyst show they can, removing viruses even up to log 12.

Mark Horstman:
If they’re meeting that target, is that OK?

Prof Peter Collignon: Well, I would be reassured by that because a lot of the other plants haven’t even achieved that. But I still think there’s a problem even with those guidelines. They run on 95 percentiles. Now again, that means one in 20 may not meet it. To me, that’s not stringent enough.

NARRATION:
That’s why Queensland legislation requires the safety target to be met 100 percent of the time, and reported if they don’t.

John Bradley:
The science speaks for itself. There’s no doubt that this can be a safe and reliable source of drinking water supply, but there is a way to go to actually convince the community of the evidence that’s before them.

Dr Helen Stratton:
The water’s safe and it’s safe beyond doubt and that there’s safety checks in place to know if it wasn’t going to be safe.


Catalyst does a repeat of clipping the Snow Manners comment so it seems like he says that Toowoomba doesn't need to know about the science.  Here's what he really said: Catalyst - What was really said.

And don't try suing the Qld government if something goes wrong.  Anna Bligh and Kerry Shine made sure you can't sue the government if the process fails.  The government doesn't even need to notify the public if something goes wrong.

If Anna Bligh wins on Saturday, you can bet her spin doctors will do everything in their power to bury any problems with the system.

It make one wonder - if the recycled water is so great, why isn't Anna Bligh running election ads about it ...

Kevin Rudd's Labor heartland turns on ETS ...

Labor heartland turns on ETS as modelling shows greater regional impact

17 March 2009

The mayors of three of the nation's biggest mining cities have demanded Kevin Rudd delay introducing carbon emissions trading, warning it will smash jobs and seriously damage key regional areas.

The mayors of the traditional Labor strongholds of Newcastle, Gladstone and Mount Isa have called for the emissions trading scheme to be put off.

And the managing director of Frontier Economics, Danny Price, who conducted still-secret modelling for the NSW Treasury on the Rudd Government's plan, said the impact of the scheme across industrial regions, including central Queensland, the Hunter and Illawarra in NSW and Victoria's Gippsland, would be "very high" and "very severe".

"In those regions, the effect on regional GDP would be many, many times more than the national effect forecast by the Treasury, which predicted an ETS would cut 0.1 per cent of average annual growth," Mr Price said.

The growing opposition to the Rudd Government's ETS came as the Opposition intensified its attack on the scheme as a job destroyer, with Malcolm Turnbull declaring the Coalition would not vote for the ETS in its current form.

After the Opposition Leader's weekend declaration that the Coalition would not support a 2010 start-up date or the current design of the Rudd plan, the Government has become increasingly isolated on its support for the scheme.

...

See - The Australian - Labor heartland turns on ETS as modelling shows greater regional impact.

Monday, March 16, 2009

Anna Bligh's problem - Labor isn't selling this time ...

Labor isn't selling this time

16 March 2009

How do you win an election when whatever you say seems to turn voters off? That's a question Anna Bligh has seven days to answer, or be evicted from the executive suite.

We've market-tested the positive and negative ads of the ALP and the Liberal National Party with 665 voters. The results were devastating for the ALP.

It didn't matter which ALP ad voters were shown, twice as many were less likely to vote Labor after viewing compared to more likely: a net movement away in the vicinity of 20per cent.

By contrast LNP negative ad enhanced the party's vote, with a net positive movement towards it of 17 per cent.

This is good, but as it is less than the movement caused by the ALP ad, this means it is less effective for the LNP than Labor's ad.

Worse for the ALP, among those voters who have already swung from it to the LNP, 70 per cent
said the negative ad made them less likely to vote Labor.
...

The Labor ad is yet another rehash of the Whingeing Wendy ad, first seen in 1987. Twenty-two years later Labor is still using the same format, and even if voters weren't born when Wendy made her debut, the genre is as recognisable, and tired, as carpet-warehouse type ads. Subliminally this confirms what voters already think: that Labor has been in power too long.
...

See - The Australian - Labor isn't selling this time.

Anna Bligh hears footsteps behind her ...

Footsteps behind her

16 March 2009

With less than 3km left to run in the Gold Coast half-marathon last year, Anna Bligh could no longer stand the pain coming from blisters created by her new running shoes. So she took them off and, in the words of the Gold Coast Bulletin, "toughed it out" by finishing the 21km race in her socks.

Lawrence Springborg is also a runner, but not one who competes in events such as the Gold Coast half-marathon. But if this election campaign were the half-marathon, then Bligh, having led Springborg for most of the race, is now toughing it out and looking over her shoulder at the fast-finishing Springborg.
...

See - The Australian - Footsteps behind her.

Anna Bligh says The Greens are 'certainly not an alternative govt' ...

Anna Bligh gets into trouble with her Twitter account.


Also see - Anna deletes her Mt Isa Twitter message.

Anna Bligh's QWC appointee Elizabeth Nosworthy has the 'minus touch' ...

She's got the minus touch

16 March 2009

There is more than one way to clear space in the diary.

Elizabeth Nosworthy, for one, has freed up a few dates of late, starting out by riding the mini telco Commander Communications into the grave.

And on Friday, the chairwoman of the once high-flying Babcock & Brown steered the carcass of the investment bank into the loving warm embrace of administrators, freeing up a bit more time.

So no doubt Liz has her eyes squarely on events in coming weeks at one of her last standing gigs, as a director of Ventracor. Word is the heart device maker is about to become the third Nosworthy company to flatline.

Shares are suspended, it still hasn't found a buyer nor been able to file its half-year accounts and it's fair to say there's not much cash left to burn.

The company's 150-odd staff are expected to find out shortly if they still have jobs.

And remarkably that would include Liz.  Again.

It's quite a to-do list: Commander, check. Babcock, tick. Ventracor, sharpen the pencil.

It's not like she has been taking half measures as a rain dancer in Queensland's drought-busting water management gig either.  Half the state has been flooded since she started praying for rain.

It is fair to say investors in her other directorship, GPT, have grounds for feeling nervous.


See - Sydney Morning Herald - QWC head has the minus touch.

Sunday, March 15, 2009

K Rudd hiding behind St Therese ...

Rudd hiding behind St Therese

The Prime Minister's hypocrisy should be under attack, not his wife's business acumen, writes Janet Albrechtsen

11 March 2009

Therese Rein must be sick of being used and abused in every conceivable way by the ALP and its allies.

She was forced to sell the Australian arm of her business because its use of common law contracts conflicted with the ALP's union agenda to outlaw flexible agreements.

And now she is being held up as a human shield to deflect completely legitimate criticism of her husband's hypocritical attack on "neo-liberal, let 'er rip capitalism".

The same party heavies who were responsible for Rein selling her business to appease union warlords opposed to flexible, non-award contracts have now dragged her into an unrelated debate about her husband's now notorious essay in The Monthly. Malcolm Turnbull must have hit a soft spot to provoke the feeble "don't attack Kevin's wife" defence from the very people who forced her to sacrifice her Australian business on the altar of that sacred union award agenda.
...

Spare us, Prime Minister. The real lesson is this. If you are going to write the kind of dishonest and hypocritical claptrap as you did in The Monthly, you can expect to have people pointing out the intellectual and moral weaknesses in your arguments. And you have to understand this battle of ideas can get a bit willing.

If you're going to dish it out, you need to stand your ground when someone belts you back in an obvious weak spot. Glass jaws have no place in politics.

And with due respect, PM, if you are going to start a fight like this, don't hide behind your wife's skirt when battle is joined.


See - The Australian - Rudd hiding behind St Therese.

Have you seen this man - Anna Bligh's MP in charge of the environment ...

Andrew McNamara - Qld Minister for Sustainability, Climate Change and Innovation.

If you see him, let him know that SEQ's largest environmental disaster is unfolding while he is MIA ...

Japanese scientists cool on global warming theories ...

Japanese scientists cool on theories

14 March 2009

Three senior Japanese scientists separately engaged in climate-change research have strongly questioned the validity of the man-made global-warming model that underpins the drive by the UN and most developed-nation governments to curb greenhouse gas emissions.

"I believe the anthropogenic (man-made) effect for climate change is still only one of the hypotheses to explain the variability of climate," Kanya Kusano told The Weekend Australian.

It could take 10 to 20 years more research to prove or disprove the theory of anthropogenic climate change, said Dr Kusano, a research group leader with the Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science's Earth Simulator project.

"Before anyone noticed, this hypothesis has been substituted for truth," writes Shunichi Akasofu, founding director of the University of Alaska's International Arctic Research Centre.

Dr Kusano, Dr Akasofu and Tokyo Institute of Technology geology professor Shigenori Maruyama are highly critical of the UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change's acceptance that hazardous global warming results mainly from man-made gas emissions.

On the scientific evidence so far, according to Dr Kusano, the IPCC assertion that atmospheric temperatures are likely to increase continuously and steadily "should be perceived as an unprovable hypothesis".

Dr Maruyama said yesterday there was widespread scepticism among his colleagues about the IPCC's fourth and latest assessment report that most of the observed global temperature increase since the mid-20th century "is very likely due to the observed increase in anthropogenic greenhouse gas concentrations".

When this question was raised at a Japan Geoscience Union symposium last year, he said, "the result showed 90 per cent of the participants do not believe the IPCC report".


Dr Maruyama studies the geological evidence of prehistoric climate change, and he thinks the large influences on global climate over time may be global cosmic rays and solar activity.

Like Dr Akasofu, Dr Maruyama believes the earth has moved into a cooling period, and while Japan is spending hundreds of millions of dollars on carbon credits to hedge against global warming, the country's greatest looming problem is energy shortage, particularly oil.

"Our nation must pay huge amounts of money to buy carbon discharge rights," he said. "This is not reasonable, but meaningless if global cooling will come soon -- scientists will lose trust."
...

Dr Maruyama said many scientists were doubtful about man-made climate-change theory, but did not want to risk their funding from the government or bad publicity from the mass media, which he said was leading society in the wrong direction.

See - The Australian -
Japanese scientists cool on theories.

Don't question the religion ...

Friday, March 13, 2009

Orange County home prices plunge - recycled water was meant to mean a price boom ...


In 2006, claims were made by people in favour of former Mayor Thorley's recycled water plant for Toowoomba (and published on the Toowoomba City Council's website - see comments) that home prices would rise dramatically if it was implemented.

They used the example of Orange County to demonstrate this.

Put in a recycled water plant and everyone will buy homes in the region they said.

Their theory overlooked one small issue - the bubble developing in US home prices.

Orange County still has its recycled water project and what's happened to home prices?

They've plunged.

Using the Yes team rationale, it looks like putting in a recycled water plant leads to plunging home prices in the region.

Or it's the bursting of the real estate asset bubble.

The passage of time has shown their argument to be complete rubbish - like most of the Yes campaign ...

Thursday, March 12, 2009

Qld election - LNP say no to recycled water in dams ...

Has the Deputy Opposition Leader gone a bit beyond her brief in ducking questions from the Deputy Premier ...

Mr Lucas and Ms Simpson were guest speakers at a Gold Coast Combined Chamber of Commerce lunch yesterday and locked horns over their differing recycled water policies.

Mr Lucas challenged his counterpart to name a trigger-point for when the LNP would put recycled sewage into drinking supplies.

"We don't go anywhere near the dams," said Ms Simpson.

"The fact the State Government even got Queensland to the point where it's sitting on the edge of armageddon is a disgrace."

When pushed by Mr Lucas about when recycled water would be considered, she retorted: "We are not planning armageddon, we are planning to ensure good sources of water."


See - Goldcoast.com.au - LNP say they're not planning armageddon.

Wednesday, March 11, 2009

Purple pipe recycled water - things too hard for Toowoomba to contemplate ...

Some examples:

See - Purple Pipe recycled water subdivision wins award.





AWA and Toowoomba Regional Council face-off - AWA says purple pipe recycled water is ok ...

The Australian Water Association (AWA) says domestic recycled water schemes are necessary if authorities want to make the best use of water resources in their area.

The Toowoomba Regional Council will not make it mandatory for new housing developments to use dual reticulation, or 'purple pipe' systems, saying new state regulations make them unsafe.

The decision affects estates in Westbrook, Oakey and Highfields.

AWA chief executive Tom Mollenkopf says the water used in the systems is of the highest standard.

"It's not of a standard that you would want to drink. However, that's really out of an abundance of caution. So you'll find that water utilities are very risk averse, so they make sure the water is of a really high standard before they allow you to come in contact with it," he said.


See - ABC News - AWA says purple pipe recycled water is ok.

Toowoomba Regional Council announces recycled water scheme changes ...

Changes recommended to council’s recycled water schemes

9 March 2009

The current review of Council’s water recycling schemes will mean changes to some treated effluent reuse schemes already in place in the region.

The schemes are being reviewed to ensure they meet new regulatory standards while also making the most of the environmental benefits of treated effluent re-use.

Changes under the Water Supply (Safety and Reliability) Act of 2008 and the Public Health Amendment Regulation (No. 1) of 2008, coupled with EPA (Environmental Protection Agency) requirements have necessitated changes to some schemes in the region.

Water Services portfolio leader Cr Paul Antonio said the region’s future growth could only be guaranteed by reducing demand through water conservation practices and securing a sustainable water supply.

“The pipeline connection from Wivenhoe Dam to Cressbrook Dam will guarantee a secure water supply to 2051. The pipeline is currently being built and will deliver potable water to us by March 2010.

“In addition, council is reviewing 13 different recycled water schemes that operate across the region. We need to ensure they comply with the new regulations and meet our objective of maximising treated effluent reuse in a safe, economic and environmentally sound way,” Cr Antonio said.

“Council presently has committed 65 percent of its treated wastewater for recycling in a variety of industrial, mining, agricultural, sporting, construction and domestic uses.

“Our largest water recycling scheme will see the supply to New Acland Coal Mine from June this year, of 3,000ML of high quality Class A+ recycled water from Wetalla Water Reclamation Facility.

“This project, along with the existing supply of 1,000ML to Millmerran Power Station and 400ML to New Wave Leathers, will provide a potential revenue stream of between $4.85m and $8.6m per year, as supply to the mine increases to full supply.

“This revenue will help in offsetting the expected costs of pumping water from Wivenhoe.”

Cr Antonio said there were numerous examples of parks, sporting fields, golf courses, agricultural crops and construction sites that had benefitted from the use of council’s recycled water and would continue to do so.

However, the review has recommended the purple pipe, dual reticulation schemes in Highfields, Westbrook and Oakey be discontinued due to unforeseen public health and compliance concerns.

“Discontinuation of the Highfields scheme will impact on the 80 householders who purchased blocks in Trevean Gardens Estate.

“While the original purpose of the purple pipe, dual reticulation scheme was to offer a ‘green’ alternative, changes to regulations since the scheme was devised, now mean the scheme is unviable from both a public health and monitoring and compliance perspective.

“While rainwater tanks will remain a mandatory requirement of new housing blocks, they will not have to be placed underground, as they were in Trevean Gardens.

“It is recommended the dual reticulation system installed but not connected to blocks in Oakey and Westbrook be discontinued for similar reasons.

“There are very few sustainable dual reticulation/purple pipe systems around Australia that supply domestic or commercial/industrial uses.”

Cr Antonio said all future alternative water supply options including water recycling schemes, would be judged according to a benefit-cost model and rational analysis.

“Obviously council will continue to encourage households to reduce their demand on potable supplies through the installation of rainwater tanks, water conservation and the use of water wise appliances.

“Any new scheme must add up. Ultimately we need to consider how these all fit in with the total water supply system and take a long term view, based on what happens when the drought breaks and our storage dams are replenished.”


See - Toowoomba Regional Council announces recycled water scheme changes.

Tuesday, March 10, 2009

Toowoomba Regional Council rules out 'unsafe' purple pipe water recycling on health concerns ...

Deputy Mayor Antonio declares recycled water 'unsafe'.

Water services director Kevin Flanagan recommends discontinuing it due to “unforseen” health concerns.

Property developers throw their hands up in the air.

Recycling backflip

9 March 2009

Toowoomba Regional Council has performed a major backflip with plans to ban its purple pipe recycled water system.

Mayor Peter Taylor and the former Crows Nest and Jondaryan councils had promoted the scheme as a key means of saving water pre-amalgamation.

That was until yesterday when
Deputy Mayor Paul Antonio announced it was unsafe to use the Class A+ recycled water system for flushing toilets and hosing gardens.

“It's a risk council is not prepared to take,” he said.

Class A+ is the highest rank of recycled water for non-drinking purposes in Queensland, but Cr Antonio said problems arose from the design of existing systems.

Water services director Kevin Flanagan will today recommend the council discontinue the scheme due to “unforseen” health concerns and enormous costs associated with testing the safety of supplies.

“The current system doesn't work,” he said.

Developers Jeff Trevarthen and John Anderson were miffed when The Chronicle told them of the decision.

The men behind the 80-lot Trevean Gardens estate were not just encouraged by the Crows Nest Shire Council to install purple pipe systems - the council both co-branded and constructed the subdivision.

Their award-winning scheme linked to 10,000 litre underground rainwater tanks at the cost of more than $5000 a lot, was to become the prototype for all Highfields developments. “We felt recycling for gardens and toilets was a sensible way to save water,” Mr Trevarthen said.

“Now to have this thrown out is very disappointing. We have gone to a lot of trouble we didn't need to.”

The developers met in November with Crs Taylor, Antonio, Joe Ramia and Mike Williams to discuss the purple pipe scheme, after hearing whispers it was under threat.

“We were given categorical assurances it would be maintained,” Mr Trevarthen said.

About 184 blocks in Westbrook and Oakey also have similar systems.

Cr Antonio said the changes were prompted by new State Government regulations and the fact that monitoring would cost about $120,000 a year in Highfields alone.

“In the last six months, there was absolutely no demand on the purple pipe system (which only engages when the tank drops below 10 per cent capacity),” he said. “No flow in the recycled water mains can lead to microbial growth, slime and water becoming stagnant.”

Highfields developer Mac Stirling, who included the purple pipe system to his Power Homes sustainable housing project, said the council should now find new solutions to water scarcity.

Cr Antonio said rainwater tanks would remain mandatory in new housing blocks and 65% of council's treated sewage would be recycled.

“This water will be sold and generate between $4.85 million up to $8.6 million a year,” he said.

“The pipeline from Wivenhoe Dam will guarantee a secure water supply to 2051.”

Councillors will discuss the issue at today's committee meeting.


See - The Chronicle - Backflip on purple pipe water recycling.

Monday, March 09, 2009

Anna Bligh wants your views on recycled water ...

You can give your views on recycled water to Anna Bligh here - Anna Bligh says tell us your story.

Here's a suggestion - When recycled water is introduced into Wivenhoe Dam, will the Labor politicians in Parliament be served your 'purified water' or 'Perrier water' to drink?

She may not print them though.  The Anna4Qld website only seems to print the 'we luv Anna' stories - probably written late at night by her staff ...

Anna Bligh election blow - coal seam gas projects face delays ...

The global giants BG Group, ConocoPhillips, Petronas and Shell have pledged about $20 billion to turn Queensland into the Asia-Pacific region's new energy hub through rival gas export plants. Most of the deals were signed when crude oil was approaching $US150 a barrel.

The companies aim to export 20 million tonnes of gas a year from as early as 2014 - almost seven times Queensland's annual gas consumption. Given such lofty goals, the market has always expected mergers. But with oil - which liquefied natural gas prices reflect - now about $US40 a barrel, the environment is vastly different to what it was even six months ago.

The race to sign up customers remains fierce, but LNG spot prices have plunged, and project costs have fallen only modestly from the inflated peaks reached in the boom.


An oil and gas analyst at BBY, Scott Ashton, said if low oil prices persisted without a similar fall in costs such as for labour and equipment, the projects' returns could move into marginal or uneconomic territory of about 10 per cent. LNG ventures are capital-intensive investments for which 15 per cent is a reasonable return over 20 years.


See - Sydney Morning Herald - New blow for gas export push.

Sunday, March 08, 2009

Malcolm Turnbull on K Rudd's Christmas holiday essay ...

[W]hat are we to think of the wealthiest Prime Minister Australia has ever had, a man greatly enriched by the privatisation and outsourcing of government services, standing up again and again to denounce the very policies from which he and his family have profited so extensively.

See - The Australian - PM's cheap money shot.

Dumb Water - the unpretentious thirst quencher ...