A cartoon from The Sydney Morning Herald from soon after Mr Dyer's appointment. |
In an interview with Fairfax Media, Andrew Dyer, who was
appointed to the wind energy watchdog post in October, said he believed there
were genuine issues around wind farms to be solved and he was one of a handful
of people with the skills to do it.
The national wind farm commissioner has been a highly
contested position since it was first created by then Prime Minister Tony
Abbott last year.
Critics say the position – established via a deal with
anti-wind crossbench Senators – was another attempt to stymie the roll-out of
clean energy. There has also been a heavy focus from critics on Mr Dyer's
$205,000 a year remuneration and the job's classification as part-time.
Read Tom Arup’s story in today’s Melbourne Age - “Wind farm commissioner insists he's good value for taxpayers at $200,000 a year.”
($200,000 a year for
a part-time job about something that according to most research is
psycho-somatic, while the measurable, provable
and simply real health difficulties, social and physical cost connected with
fossil fuels slip by largely unattended. Wind turbines,compared to the ugly
scars left on the earth by open-cut coal mining and the damages to human and
animal health caused by the burning of fossil fuels, are unequivocally beautiful.
The $200,000 a year part-time job is ideological “job for the boys”. Beyond
anything else, it is simply wrong – Robert
McLean.)
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