31 March, 2018

Channel Country-A Fascinating Part of Australia



The Lake Eyre Basin covers almost one sixth of Australia at 1.2 million square kilometres across Queensland, South Australia and the Northern Territory and NSW, but 60,000 people live in the Basin, which is one of the world's largest internally draining river systems.
  
 


A Moderate Flood Warning for Cooper Creek and Minor Flood Warning for the Thomson River, is current, as is a Moderate Flood Warning for Eyre Creek and a Flood Warning for the lower Diamantina River.

30 March, 2018

A Great Letter-Alan Jones on Ball Tampering

This is a great letter. The ACB should take notice. https://www.2gb.com/alans-letter-to-cricket-australia-ceo-james-sutherland/

Australian Cricket Captain Steve Smith

Steve Smith made a great error of judgement. The disgrace of being stood down by the CA and sent home, on top of the ICC penalty of one Test and his total last Test Match fee, should be sufficient punishment.This is particularly the case when you consider the precedents of light  punishments handed out to other Test cricketers for ball tampering. He has clearly learnt his lesson.
He should appeal the CA penalty of twelve months suspension, which should be lifted.

28 March, 2018

Energy

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Facts on Australia’s Electricity Dilemma

  • It is unwise for Australia to rely on weather dependent wind, solar and hydro for electricity generation as the continent is noted for having the world’s most variable and unpredictable weather ill matched to electricity demand which is characterised by reliability and predictability.
  • Unlike many countries Australia will never have much conventional hydro electricity. As the flattest and driest continent Australia’s renewable electricity must mainly come from wind and solar generation.
  • Batteries and pumped hydro systems do not make electricity. All they can do is give back previously generated electricity less a discount of about 20%.
  • Depending on weather conditions, combined wind farm capacity across Australia can produce as little as 2% or more than 70% of design capacity. Solar varies from 0% to about 80%. The proportion of a generator’s design capacity actually generated is known as “capacity factor”.
  • The electricity grid is not a storage system. Daily, weekly or monthly averages are meaningless. Generators of all types have to meet instantaneous demand every second of every day.
  • With average capacity factors of between 20% and 30%, approximately three times more wind and solar capacity is required to replace a given thermal generator’s capacity. And that assumes sufficient storage is associated with the renewables to cover their inevitable wide swings in output.
  • Weather systems can dominate the entire country meaning that geographic diversity is no solution to the problem of “wind drought”.
  • Solar panels produce electricity almost entirely between the morning and evening peaks of the typical demand curve so they do not reduce peak demand. And they produce nothing at night.
  • The $6bn Snowy 2 project will not produce any extra water or generate any new electricity. Its sole purpose is to make intermittent renewable energy reliable to match the thermal generators deemed no longer needed. When the capital and operating costs of such storage systems is added as it must be, renewable electricity can never be considered cheap.
  • In a global emissions context Australia is inconsequential. Nothing Australia does can possibly make any measurable difference to world emissions.
  • With current technologies batteries and pumped hydro storages will be hopelessly inadequate to compensate for inevitable wind droughts or even to cover the 16 hours per day that solar systems don’t work.
  • In a future of thermal generator shut downs and therefore limited dispatchable thermal power, surplus night time off-peak electricity will not exist. Then opportunities to recharge pumped hydro storages and batteries will be limited to unpredictable high capacity factor wind and solar episodes.
  • If the sun isn’t shining, the wind isn’t blowing and the storages are empty electricity is not available at any price.
  • Design capacity comparisons between dispatchable generators and wind and solar generators are meaningless because of the unpredictability of “capacity factors”. To say that a wind or solar farm will power X number of households is nonsense.

Alex Campbell BE Revised 27th March 2018

13 March, 2018

Matt Ridley-I can't get too much of this guy!


MATT RIDLEY


march 12 2018, 12:01am, the times
My cure for Disease X? A bit of positivity


matt ridley


Doom-mongering about a hypothetical threat to humanity is a symptom of people’s tendency towards pessimism







‘Deadly new epidemic called Disease X could kill millions, scientists warn,” read one headline at the weekend. “WHO issues global alert for potential pandemic,” read another. Apparently frustrated by the way real infectious diseases keep failing to wipe us out, it seems that the nannies at the World Health Organisation have decided to invent a fictitious one.


Disease X is going to be a virus that jumps unexpectedly from an animal species, as happens from time to time, or perhaps a man-made pathogen from a dictator’s biological warfare laboratory. To be alert for such things is sensible, especially after what has happened in Salisbury, but to imply that the risk is high is irresponsible.


No matter how clever gene editors get, the chances that they could beat evolution at its own game and come up with the right combination of infectiousness, lethality and viability to spread a disease through the human race are vanishingly small. To do so in secret would be even harder.


I fear the only effect of the WHO’s decision could be to cause unnecessary alarm and damage public confidence in the very technology that brings more effective cures and vaccines for known and unknown diseases. It also feeds our appetite for bad news rather than good. Almost by definition, bad news is sudden while good news is gradual and therefore less newsworthy. Things blow up, melt down, erupt or crash; there are few good-news equivalents. If a country, a policy or a company starts to do well it soon drops out of the news.


This distorts our view of the world. Two years ago a group of Dutch researchers asked 26,492 people in 24 countries a simple question: over the past 20 years, has the proportion of the world population that lives in extreme poverty

1) Increased by 50 per cent?


2) Increased by 25 per cent?


3) Stayed the same?


4) Decreased by 25 per cent?


5) Decreased by 50 per cent?


Only 1 per cent got the answer right, which was that it had decreased by 50 per cent. The United Nations’ Millennium Development goal of halving global poverty by 2015 was met five years early.


As the late Swedish statistician Hans Rosling pointed out with a similar survey, this suggests people know less about the human world than chimpanzees do, because if you had written those five options on five bananas and thrown them to a chimp, it would have a 20 per cent chance of picking up the right banana. A random guess would do 20 times as well as a human. As the historian of science Daniel Boorstin once put it: “The greatest obstacle to discovery is not ignorance — it is the illusion of knowledge.”


Nobody likes telling you the good news. Poverty and hunger are the business Oxfam is in, but has it shouted the global poverty statistics from the rooftops? Hardly. It has switched its focus to inequality. When The Lancet published a study in 2010 showing global maternal mortality falling, advocates for women’s health tried to pressure it into delaying publication “fearing that good news would detract from the urgency of their cause”, The New York Times reported. The announcement by Nasa in 2016 that plant life is covering more and more of the planet as a result of carbon dioxide emissions was handled like radioactivity by most environmental reporters.


What is more, the bias against good news in the media seems to be getting worse. In 2011 the American academic Kalev Leetaru employed a computer to do “sentiment mining” on certain news outlets over 30 years: counting the number of positive versus negative words. He found “a steady, near linear, march towards negativity”. A recent Harvard study found that 87 per cent of the coverage of the fitness for office of both candidates in the 2016 US presidential election was negative. During the first 100 days of Donald Trump’s presidency, 80 per cent of all coverage was negative. He is of course a master of the art of playing upon people’s pessimism.


This is a human susceptibility and one that is open to exploitation. Even while saying that they would prefer good news, subjects in a subtle psychology experiment in Canada who were told to choose and read a newspaper article while waiting for the “experiment” to begin in fact “chose stories with a negative tone — corruption, setbacks, hypocrisy and so on — rather than neutral or positive stories”. Financial journalists have been found to report rising financial market indices with declining enthusiasm as rises continue, but falling ones with growing enthusiasm as the falls continue. As the Financial Times columnist John Authers said: “We are far more scared of encouraging readers to buy and ushering them into a loss, than we are of urging them to be cautious, and leading them to miss out on a gain.”


That is one reason for the pervasive negativity bias that afflicts the public discourse. Humans are loss-averse, disliking a loss far more than they like an equivalent gain. Such a cognitive bias probably kept us safe amid the dangers of the African savannah, where the downside of taking risks was big. The golden-age tendency makes us remember the good things about the past but forget the bad, with the result that the present seems worse than it is. For some reason people sound wiser if they think things are going to turn out badly. In fiction, Cassandra’s doom-mongering proved prescient; Pollyanna was punished for her optimism by being hit by a car. Thus, any news coverage of the future is especially prone to doom-mongering. Brexit is a splendid example: because it has not yet happened, all sorts of ways in which it could go wrong can be imagined. The supreme case of unfalsifiable pessimism is climate change. It has the advantage of decades of doom until the jury returns. People who think the science suggests it will not be as bad as all that, or that humanity is likely to mitigate or adapt to it in time, get less airtime and a lot more criticism than people who go beyond the science to exaggerate the potential risks. That lukewarmers have been proved right so far cuts no ice.


Activists sometimes justify the focus on the worst-case scenario as a means of raising consciousness. But while the public may be susceptible to bad news they are not stupid, and boys who cry “wolf!” are eventually ignored. As the journalist John Horgan recently argued in Scientific American: “These days, despair is a bigger problem than optimism.”