Three years
ago the Shepparton-based Slap Tomorrow
organized and staged a forum entitled “A wake-up call” and still today
people continue to encourage us to wake from our slumber.
Jenny Goldie, from Michelago in New South Wales, wrote about
that need for us to “wake up” in the Melbourne Age on December 19 under the
heading: “Heed wake-up calls before it's too late.”
She wrote:
Ian Dunlop's superb article ("Rational climate and energy
policy", 13/12) is a wake-up call. If we are to have several metres of
sea-level rise this century, then we have to vacate the major cities of the
world (New York, London, Shanghai). No amount of adaptation will be possible.
The Australian government has to do its bit to minimise global warming. It has
to increase its emission reduction targets to at least 65 per cent on 2005
levels by 2030; ban all new coal mines; immediately close down power stations
based on brown coal, such as Hazelwood, and phase out the rest; increase
climate funding to $1.6billion a year from new money, not the existing aid
budget; phase out all fossil fuel subsidies (while compensating food producers
who would lose the diesel fuel rebate); promise to keep the Clean Energy
Finance Corporation and the Australian Renewable Energy Agency; and
significantly increase subsidies to the renewable energy sector. There is no
hope unless we make a complete shift away from fossil fuels before mid-century.
Meanwhile, Jenny Henty, of Canterbury, in arguing for us to
consider how we talk about climate change wrote today in the Age under the heading: “Seasonal change”:
I agree with Terry Hastings that the term "bushfire season"
is problematic (Letters, 3/1) but for different reasons. In the new reality,
spring, summer and autumn are all potentially bushfire seasons. With the advent
of global warming our language has to admit to the changed climate: only then
we mobilise our wills and determine a course to a clean renewable energy
future.
And again today, arguing that “Farmers do their bit”, John Marriott, of Point Lonsdale, wrote:
While it is a fact that livestock are emitters of greenhouse gases
(Letters 3/1), many livestock producers also carry out farming practices and
revegetation programs that sequester carbon – in fact some are net
sequesterers, unlike the transport industry. Don't cancel the weekly visit to
the butcher too soon.


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