Showing posts with label Conservationists. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Conservationists. Show all posts

13 January, 2019

Waste crisis looms as thousands of solar panels reach end of life

Thousands of ageing rooftop solar panels represent a toxic time-bomb and major economic waste unless Australia acts swiftly to keep them out of landfill, conservationists and recyclers say.
Solar panel components waiting for
recycling at a Reclaim PV warehouse.
Australia’s enthusiastic embrace of rooftop solar has brought clear environmental and economic benefits, but critics say governments have dragged their feet in addressing the looming waste crisis.

As of December more than 2 million Australian households had rooftop solar installed. The uptake continues to grow due to the technology’s falling cost and rising electricity bills.

Read the story from The Sydney Morning Herald by Nicole Hasham - “Waste crisis looms as thousands of solar panels reach end of life.”


(It seems a little odd to me that we now becoming somewhat agitated about solar panels which have ended their useful life leaving us with a waste stream that is tiny when to compared to the Industrial Age waste littering the world. Exhausted factories and their supporting paraphernalia lie in waste in towns and cities all around the world as do mountains of old motor cars, trucks, buses, trains and other contraptions which supported the human experiment. That doesn't mean, of course, that we should have a dedicated system of disposal for the old solar panels - Robert McLean)

24 November, 2018

China Stone thermal coal mine gets coordinator-general approval but conservationists unhappy

A new nearly $7 billion mega-mine in Queensland's Galilee Basin is a step closer after gaining approval from the state's coordinator-general, who released has an evaluation of the environmental impact statement (EIS), but conservationists say the decision is "reckless".
A State Development Minister spokeswoman
 says the project is subject to strict conditions.
MacMines AustAsia's 20,000-hectare China Stone thermal coal project is expected to produce 38 million tonnes of coal annually.

It will create thousands of jobs and is planned to be built alongside Adani's proposed mine in central Queensland, looping into the Indian project's planned railway line to Abbot Point.


19 December, 2016

'Populist' and 'never to happen': critics brush off One Nation's calls to drought-proof western Queensland

One Nation calls for Bradfield Scheme to
 be implemented to drought-proof western
Queensland as it mounts its bid for
 the 2018 state election.
Conservationists and Queensland's Environment Minister Stephen Miles have brushed off One Nation's announcement that it wants to drought-proof western Queensland through a mass water infrastructure project.

One Nation has been plotting its course to the next state election, tipped for 2018, and yesterday announced its first 36 candidates.

Most of the initial candidates are based in regional Queensland, and the party's policy to reconsider the controversial Bradfield Scheme is seen as an attempt to win the rural vote.