Archive for the ‘CCS’ Category

Another Energy Retailer Moves Away From Coal

Posted on June 9th, 2009 by Simon Roz
Filed under CCS, Coal, Climate change | Global warming, Renewable energy | 1 Comment

Slowly but surely, electricity retailers in Australia are moving away from coal.  Just last week, Red Energy, ruled out buying electricity from any new coal power stations.  Their owner, Snowy Hydro, has also committed to not building new coal-fired power stations.

This is great news. It proves again that electricity retailers and generators can rule out […]

Budget Aftermath: Part 2, “A Turning Tide”

Posted on May 13th, 2009 by Julien Vincent
Filed under Green New Deal, Green Investment, CCS, Emission Trading, Climate change | Global warming | 2 Comments

It’s a day on from my initial report back on the budget and I’ve been trying to make sure I’m not getting carried away with the size of the renewable energy funding. After years of budgets being handed down that do the square root of not much for real climate solutions, I’m naturally inclined to […]

Budget Aftermath: Part 1, or “Hope!”

Posted on May 13th, 2009 by Julien Vincent
Filed under Green New Deal, CCS, Coal, Climate change | Global warming, Renewable energy | No Comments

I’ve had quite a lot of time to contemplate tonight’s federal budget, having spent four hours in the Treasury lock-up with papers open to pages numbering into the 300s and a confused look on my face shouting: “WHAT? … HUH? … OK, so it’s $100 coming from this department, but only allocated after the first […]

Labor’s dirty coal dependency

Posted on March 23rd, 2009 by Dan Cass
Filed under Greenhouse Mafia, CCS, Emission Trading, Coal, Climate change | Global warming | 5 Comments

Today the big bad news, again, is the failure of the Australian Government to do something decisive on climate change. The Melbourne Age reports that ‘State emission cuts ‘futile’ and would aid polluters’.
Our CEO, Steve Shallhorn writes in the Sydney Morning Herald, where he asks ‘Why is the Federal Government failing to live up to […]

Why Kevin Rudd is backing the wrong horse

Posted on February 16th, 2009 by Simon Roz
Filed under Green New Deal, CCS, Climate change | Global warming | 7 Comments

Multi-lateral efforts to promote renewable energy, and overcome the barriers to deployment, have intensified recently, with the establishment of a new global body. The International Renewable Energy Agency (IRENA) aims to become “the main driving force in promoting a rapid transition towards the widespread and sustainable use of renewable energy on a global scale”. Sounds great, unfortunately […]

The coal industry’s Christmas joke

Posted on December 11th, 2008 by Julien Vincent
Filed under CCS, Coal, Climate change | Global warming | 1 Comment

One thing I always associate with Christmas is terrible jokes. It might be that and awful gag has just fallen out of a broken cracker or, after a bit too much brandy, Dad decides to update us on how his comedy act is coming along.
But the coal industry have outdone us all this Christmas by […]

Diet Coal or Pure Spin? “Clean coal” gets re-badged in the spin cycle

Posted on November 12th, 2008 by Helen Oakey
Filed under CCS, Coal, Climate change | Global warming | 1 Comment

Today the Australian Coal Association launched its $2.5 million advertising campaign to convince the Government and the good people of Australia that a) it cares about climate change and b) that it has a solution that will allow us to keep digging up coal and burning it without killing the planet.
 
But somehow, despite […]

Why ‘clean coal’ is no excuse for burning coal

Posted on July 31st, 2008 by Emma Pittaway
Filed under CCS, Energy [R]evolution Tour, Queensland, Coal, Climate change | Global warming, Renewable energy | 6 Comments

Our coal ship painting action the other day put both Queensland Premier Anna Bligh and Federal Environment Minister Peter Garrett on the spot, forcing them to respond publicly about their plans to expand the coal industry. Both politicians used the development of so-called ‘clean coal’ technology as their defence.
‘Clean coal’, or carbon […]

Bligh’s response to Greenpeace coal ship action in Queensland

Posted on July 29th, 2008 by Emma Pittaway
Filed under Energy [R]evolution Tour, CCS, Coal, Climate change | Global warming | No Comments

Greenpeace activists finished their painting just moments before a police boat turned up this morning, with a final tally of 20 ships painted with messages like “Bligh exporting CO2”, “Coal is killing the Reef” and “Stop coal expansion”.
While 10 activists were taken into custody by police, Premier Bligh was questioned about the protest […]

Queensland plans to export MORE climate change

Posted on July 18th, 2008 by Emma Pittaway
Filed under Energy [R]evolution Tour, CCS, Queensland, Coal, Climate change | Global warming | 1 Comment

Premier Anna Bligh chose to announce plans for the massive expansion of Queensland’s export coal industry at the same time as the Rudd government was releasing its so-called Carbon Pollution Reduction Scheme earlier this week. In hindsight, it was easy to see there was no contradiction between the two, because Penny Wong’s policy more closely […]

G8+ Summit: Will Kevin Rudd show global climate change leadership?

Posted on July 9th, 2008 by Emma Pittaway
Filed under Energy [R]evolution Tour, CCS, Climate change | Global warming, Renewable energy | 1 Comment

Despite the G8 countries’ announcement this morning of their ‘vision’ to halve global emissions by 2050, there is a continuing reluctance on the part of the developed nations to take decisive action to reduce emissions and shift away from the global reliance on fossil fuels to renewable technologies. Kevin Rudd is speaking at the G8+ […]

How many failed flagship CCS projects will it take?

Posted on May 23rd, 2008 by Simon Roz
Filed under CCS, Coal, Renewable energy | 5 Comments

Less than two weeks ago, Greenpeace released a damning report on carbon capture and storage (CCS) labelled “False Hope” which outlined the problems associated with the unproven technology. Central to CSS’s flaws is that it’s proponents are asking us to pin our hopes that it may be available by 2030. […]

Renewable solutions sidelined whilst dirty coal is bankrolled in budget

Posted on May 13th, 2008 by Louise
Filed under CCS, Coal, Climate change | Global warming, Renewable energy | 16 Comments

From Canberra, Greenpeace head of campaigns Stephen Campbell sends this statement:
“We are in the midst of an extreme climate crisis and the Rudd Government’s first budget was an opportunity to show voters that they truly means business on climate change.
“Instead they have let Australia down by not delivering the climate solutions that are at their […]

Clean energy locked out of 2020 summit

Posted on April 22nd, 2008 by admin
Filed under CCS, Coal, Renewable energy | 4 Comments

So the political Oscars that was the 2020 summit has come to an end. The issue I had my eye on over the weekend was one close to our hearts here at Greenpeace – climate change. And funnily enough, every time I tuned into the radio over the weekend, all I kept hearing about climate […]

The clean coal myth gets a helping hand

Posted on April 16th, 2008 by Julien Vincent
Filed under CCS, Coal, Climate change | Global warming | 2 Comments

In case it has slipped anyone’s minds, let me recap why the environment movement campaigns on climate change. We have a few years left to get emissions falling dramatically and in Australia, we need to be looking at at least 40% reductions below 1990 levels by the year 2020. This is if we want to […]

South Australia’s dodgy coal projects

Posted on March 31st, 2008 by Simon Roz
Filed under CCS, Coal, Climate change | Global warming | No Comments

South Australians could be forgiven for thinking that their Premier is serious about addressing climate change. At the recent Solar Cities Conference, Premier Mike Rann announced that his Government would aim to be carbon neutral by 2020 and went on to document the state’s climate achievements.
 
Yet Premier Rann is on the brink of approving not […]