Carbon Coalition Against Global Warming

Wednesday, November 16, 2011
If you can believe yesterday's Australian Financial Review, the Carbon Farming Initiative will be rorted like the Pink Batts scheme; will not deliver genuine reductions in carbon emissions; and will put at risk the brands of any emitters who buy its offsets. It claims that this is because the CFI will not verify the actions of farmers that earn offsets and will allow farmers to claim offsets for actions they would have taken anyway because it would cost too much to prevent them.


These remarks are astonishing. Their source is an article in the Australian Financial Review based on an interview with a member of the the body responsible for ensuring that none of the things mentioned above happen. Rob Fowler is a member of the interim Domestic Offsets Integrity Committee (DOIC). The role of the DOIC is to assess offsets methodologies and work with the people putting them forward to build the safeguards into the system. The checking - physical or otherwise - is dictated by the DOIC. It has the last word.


We applaud Rob's stated aim of not burdening farmers with the expense of a what he calls a 'rort-free' system, but he seems to be saying that the operation of the CFI is impossible because of the cost of measurement and verification. This is an old objection. It overstates the problem and underestimates the impact of innovation on reducing costs. But the Government, while it will be less than impressed with the way he raised the issue, must urgently address Rob's concerns to restore confidence in the CFI.


If those of us spending thousands of hours working for free on methodologies to give farmers access to offsets can't be confident in the integrity of the process, this could deter further submissions and make Rob's prediction self-fulfilling. We are sure he wouldn't want that.

Is God a vegetarian?

Monday, September 05, 2011
"[We simply must find] more productive, safer methods that put carbon back in the soil to produce safer and better food," Al Gore urged Americans in a recent interview in TGDaily. The former Vice President also said we need to initiate an organic vegetarian diet for the general population since industrial agriculture is contributing to the relentless, growing problem of global warming. According to him, meat eating has prompted forests to clear due to higher demands for cattle, adding that synthetic nitrogen use in fertilizers continues to contribute to global warming. Mr Gore was only half wrong. The Tea Party's Michelle Bachmann - the leading Republican Presidential contender - said yesterday the cyclones and tempests slamming into the US are God's warning to Americans to change their ways. Maybe God's a vegetarian, too. In response to the laughter her comments elicited she said her remarks were meant to be a joke. And they were. Neither Mr Gore nor Ms Bachmann will be attending the Gala Awards Dinner at the Carbon Farming Conference, but there will be jokes aplenty and poetry and songs galore as part of our Talent Quest. Bring your guitar, your bush poetry and your best smile.

Climate-related disasters occurring around the world

Tuesday, July 19, 2011
Tornados, wildfires, droughts and floods were once seen as freak conditions. But the environmental disasters now striking the world are signs of 'global weirding' says a UK Guardian article covering the climate anomalies occurring around the world.

2010 one of the two warmest years on record

Tuesday, July 19, 2011
Three major independent datasets show 2010 as one of the two warmest years since official record-keeping began in the late 19th century, according to the latest NOAA State of the climate report. Annual average temperatures in the Arctic continued to rise at about twice the rate of the lower latitudes. Arctic sea ice shrank to the third smallest area on record, and the Greenland ice sheet melted at the highest rate since at least 1958. Meanwhile, average sea ice extent in the Antarctic grew to an all-time record maximum in 2010. Average global sea surface temperature was third warmest on record and sea level continued to rise. Carbon dioxide increased by 2.60 ppm, more than the average annual increase seen from 1980-2010.

17 articles from Meltwater News

Friday, June 24, 2011
Course puts focus on carbon farming
Farmers could have their own weapon for beating the carbon tax. A Carbon Farming course is being held in Dubbo on July 12 looking at ways farmers can manage carbon mitigation on-farm.

Working with the weather
More than 100 farmers and industry figures learnt how to prepare for the elements around them as part of Goulburn Murray Landcares annual Future Farming Forum last week.

Tackling food price volatility requires decisive action from G20 countries
The first-ever official meeting of Ministers of Agriculture from G20 countries being held in Paris on June 22-23, presents an extraordinary opportunity.

Carbon farming legislation 'a good first step'
The Federal Government's carbon farming initiative was passed in the lower house last week with the support of independent MPs Andrew Wilkie, Rob Oakeshott, Tony Windsor and the Greens' Adam Bandt.

Changing chemical culture
If the federal government is serious about storing carbon in soil it needs to invest in biological farming instead of relying so heavily on chemicals, two regional scientists say.

English dairy farmers set the pace
It's a crisp spring morning in Marlborough, Wiltshire, southern England, and David Homer has begun putting his first heifers out in the paddocks after a long, cold winter.

Chester rejects carbon tax
GIPPSLAND MHR Darren Chester has welcomed the National Farmers Federation’s decision to reject the Federal Government’s proposed tax on carbon dioxide.

Carbon Farming Bill clears house of reps
The Carbon Farming Bill 2011, that allows both the agricultural and waste sectors to sell green house gas emission offsets on the domestic and international markets, cleared the Federal House of Representatives on Thursday June 16.

Aviation industry is committed to addressing climate change impact
Richard Fielding ("Emissions accelerating, not declining", June 13) rightly highlights the urgent need for society to address the global challenge of climate change and the role that aviation must play in this regard.

Green Groups Blast U.N. Climate Panel
If you haven’t yet heard, hell froze over last week. Ironically, this is very bad news for a warming planet. On Monday, more than 125 environmental groups sent a scathing letter to Rajendra Pachauri, the Nobel prize-winning head of the International Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), the institutional

Carbon Sequestration : A ray of new hope
The World Come To An End On 21st October, 2011, according to Harold camping prediction, even some countries believe and start praying for a better and safer earth.

New CSIRO website shows steady rise of greenhouse gases
A new website launched today allows the public to see how greenhouse gas emissions have risen steadily over the past 35 years.

Burnoffs 'need to be halved'
THE number of bushfires deliberately lit by authorities should be halved, says a CSIRO scientist. Ecologist Anna Richards yesterday said some patches of savanna were burnt every two or three years.

From the Bottom Up – A DIY Guide to Wicking Beds
By Rob Avis: Wicking beds are a unique and increasingly popular way to grow vegetables. They are self-contained raised beds with built-in reservoirs that supply water from the bottom up – changing how, and how much, you water your beds.

Hot topics on a winter’s night
Royal Society of Tasmania’s winter lecture series Two burning issues – forests and carbon - are to be explored in the Royal Society of Tasmania’s winter lecture series, which kicks off tonight (Monday 20 June 2011) in the Stanley Burbury Theatre.

Soil has the answer to burning climate questions
by Fresh Science: Decreasing the frequency of wild fires in northern Australia would lead to an increase in the amount of carbon stored in the soil, significantly lowering greenhouse gas emissions, according to CSIRO ecologist, Dr Anna Richards.

Tony Abbott interview with Smith and McCallum, 3AW - Plebiscite on Julia Gillard’s carbon tax
TRANSCRIPT OF THE HON. TONY ABBOTT MHR INTERVIEW WITH JUSTIN SMITH AND NICK MCCALLUM, RADIO 3AW, MELBOURNE Subjects: Plebiscite on Julia Gillard’s carbon tax.

SAVE OUR SOILS: CSIRO'S SOS PLEA - ...

Thursday, May 19, 2011
Two of Australia's most pressing environmental problems - land degradation and the greenhouse effect - can be tackled at the same time, and Australia will be better off. That's according to Dr Roger Swift, Chief of the CSIRO's Division of Soils, who told a seminar in Adelaide today that the latest scientific research was showing clearly that reversing land degradation could soak up large amounts of the main greenhouse gas carbon dioxide - and help agriculture too.

"It's a terrific win-win opportunity for the environment," Dr Swift said. "Several new studies have found that land degradation and vegetation clearance are major sources of greenhouse gases in Australia - much larger than we previously thought.
"Carbon dioxide in the atmosphere is the main greenhouse gas. But the Earth's soils hold two or three times more carbon than our atmosphere, mostly in the form of decaying organic matter, or humus. When we over-exploit our soils, we mine that organic matter and the carbon escapes as carbon dioxide to the atmosphere.

"The good news is that the best way to improve soils is to add organic matter to them. By adding organic matter to degraded soil - and improving its structure and nutrition for future generations - we can also create a major sink for greenhouse gases. Remedying one problem will also help remedy the other."

Dr Swift said studies in the United States and Australia had found that as much as 50 per cent of the carbon which once existed in agricultural soils had been lost since the land had been turned over to farming.

Australian farm soils were much less fertile to begin with, he said, but until very recently scientists did not realise just how starved of carbon they were becoming. Because Australia had long been subject to regular bushfires, much of the land now used for farming contained a lot of small particles of charcoal.

Charcoal was made of carbon, but in soil it was largely inert, and was not available to growing plants. And there was so much old charcoal in Australian soil that it bumped up measurements of organic matter.

"If you discount the charcoal - some of which has been lying inert in the soil for decades, and perhaps centuries - then the true state of Australia's soils starts to look very much worse than we thought," Dr Swift said.

"In some of the farm soils we've measured, as much as half the carbon remaining is in the form of ancient charcoal.

"That is bad news, but it is also a great opportunity. If we improve our farming techniques so that we are restoring organic matter to the soil, not mining it out, we will be putting back some of the carbon which has escaped to the atmosphere."

Dr Swift said the worst-degraded lands in Australia tended to be those which were of marginal value for agriculture anyway; areas where the soil and climate made farming a risky business.

By progressively changing our use of such marginal land - allowing it to revegetate - and concentrating on improving soils in better areas, Australia could begin to reverse the loss of organic matter, and carbon, across a vast land area.

"The same road which leads to sustainable and prosperous farming also leads to helping alleviate the greenhouse effect," he said.
He said improved soil management could help stave off global warming, but it did not detract from the need to reduce greenhouse gas emissions. it was one more weapon to add to the anti-greenhouse armoury.

Dr Swift was giving a seminar titled "Soils and the Carbon Cycle" to a gathering of scientists from Adelaide's major soil research institutions at South Australia's Waite campus.

CSIRO MEDIA RELEASE 95/88
Embargoed until 12 noon on Thursday, September 7, 1995

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