A blog dedicated to ranting and raving in a barely coherent manner

A blog dedicated to ranting and raving in a barely coherent manner



Sunday, 9 December 2012

And The Bad News Is...

For some time I have thought that global warming represents a distraction from a greater threat: the looming energy crunch and the possibility our society will be unable to adapt to a world without plentiful cheap energy.  I now realise that I am wrong.  Both dangers are real and present, but global warming is the greater of the two.
There is little doubt that the laws of supply and demand will drive energy prices up.  The depletion of the oil fields in the Middle East with their easy flowing, high quality crude means that oil companies now must drill deeper, in the most extreme environments to get at oil of a much meaner quality.  The technical difficulties involved and the decreased fraction of energy extracted (since energy is consumed getting at and refining oil.  The harder it is to get and the worse the quality of the oil, the more energy gets used in the extraction process.) means oil prices will steadily rise.   But drill they do.  And the oil keeps coming and we keep burning it.   Other fossil fuels also continue to be extracted including less conventional sources including shale gas and the bituminous sands of Canada (in an act of environmental devastation which is barely comprehensible).  We may have to pay more, but it doesn’t look like we’re going to let up on fossil fuels anytime soon. 
With fossil fuel comes CO2.  Lots and lots of CO2 (I still remember the surprise when I explained to a group of senior managers at my company that the calculations they had dismissed as incorrect were right: you DO get roughly 2.75 tonnes of CO2 for every tonne of jet fuel you burn).  We keep pumping CO2 into the atmosphere like it’s an open sewer.  And CO2 causes global warming.  Despite what talkback radio would have you believe and despite the media’s idiotic insistence on presenting both sides of the “argument” when there really isn’t one, the science is unequivocal: global warming is real and it’s happening right now.
The more I look into the consequences of global warming, the more frightening it gets.  As it stands, if we stopped emitting greenhouse gases today, we’d still be in for a roughly 2 degree rise in the average global temperature.  The alarming thing is anything much higher than this must be avoided at almost any cost.  If we keep emitting to the point where the average temperature rises by, say, 4 degrees the consequences for the planet and civilisation would be utterly devastating.  But 4 degrees doesn’t sound too bad, right?  Well, the key word here is AVERAGE.  Studies show the temperature rise in the Arctic would almost certainly be several times higher than the average, greatly shrinking both the sea ice and the ice caps in Greenland causing sea levels to rise.  Even more frightening is that temperature rises in this range will trigger a number of positive feedback loops such as the release of methane, a much more powerful greenhouse gas than CO2, trapped within the ice. 
Plants which suddenly find themselves trapped in environments beyond the temperature ranges they can survive in will die (trees can’t run), releasing huge amounts of carbon into the atmosphere.  As the sea becomes more acidic from absorbing atmospheric CO2 (a significant fraction of CO2 released into the atmosphere is absorbed by the sea), the mechanism by which this CO2 is absorbed will slow down.  A large fraction of the world’s species will become extinct as their natural habitats alter at rates millions of times faster than the rate they are able to adapt.  Large regions of the planet will become virtually uninhabitable to humans due to the heat, drought, sea level rises and increasingly savage weather patterns (including, in all likelihood, Australia and southern Europe to give two alarming examples).  Modern civilisation will struggle to cope and large scale conflict, as well as starvation, is a distinct possibility.
I bet a lot of you are thinking: “come on, that view is a bit extreme!  Surely it’s not that bad?!”.  For arguments sake, let’s just say that the scenario I’ve outlined is only 10% possible.  Would you put a gun to your children’s head knowing it was 10% likely to go off, because for many millions of today’s children the result is likely to be the same.  The reality is the science tells us that the chances of my scenario are much more probable than 10%.  Evidently the time for radical action is now. 
Change is frightening, especially when for many of us the cruel reality is that change will mean the end of our present day careers and the complete alteration of the lives we have become comfortable with (since I work in aviation, I am almost certainly included in this number), but change we must or within our life times we will witness the beginning of the complete alteration of our planetary conditions and the beginning of the end of modern civilisation.  The stakes are that high. 
It frustrates me no end that most NZers shrug and say “Well, we can’t do anything about it, we are so small and our impact on the world negligible.  Besides, our contribution to global emissions is tiny anyway”.  To the last point, I would say: our contributions to emissions are only small because we lack weight of numbers.  If every citizen of the world polluted like an average NZer, the planet would be in big trouble.  To the first point I would say: bullshit!  NZ has never let its small size be an issue when it’s something relatively easy.  We boast about how we punch above our weight on the sporting field and we can, and should, punch above our weight in leading the world in transitioning to a low emission economy.  In the short term it will be expensive and hard, in the long term it will be worthwhile both environmentally and economically.  In many ways, it is our best chance of success in a rapidly changing world.  In many other ways, by not doing it we doom our children.

Friday, 28 September 2012

Welcome to Planet Key


I've never been a fan of John Key.  Sure, I lean pretty far towards the left so I find his politics pretty objectionable, I can't stand his constant butchering of the English language and I still cringe with embarrassment when I think of his appearance on Letterman, but those are not the only reasons.  I've always found it disconcerting how Mr Key invariably phrases sentences so to avoid any responsibility for their content.  Just count the number of sentences beginning with "On the advice I’ve had..." or similar.  It's a lot.  The Banks/Dotcom/GCSB saga has taken things to a new level.

In the Banks-Dotcom spat, Key seems to be adopting a "see-no-evil" approach with his refusal to read documentation that may require him to think about sanctioning Banks.  This is pretty cynical given his "holier-than-thou" approach as an opposition MP and during National's first term.  I suppose it's understandable though given Key's primary objective: to preserve his coalition and hang onto power at any cost.

The latest Dotcom scandal involving the GCSB really takes the cake though.  Despite providing the only democratically elected oversight to the GCSB, Key seems to think that he didn't know the agency was illegally spying on Dotcom absolves him of all responsibility.  Something is badly wrong here - either Key DID know and is lying, or Key has been woefully negligent and incompetent in his duties as prime-minister.  You can't have it neither way.

I think part of Key's charm is his casual attitude to the pretty serious business of running a country, at least as far as Joe Public is concerned.  The contrast with Helen Clarke's iron fist approach couldn't be sharper, and Key has rode the resultant popularity wave for a number of years.  Unfortunately for NZ, having someone tell us everything is going to be OK and not to worry about things isn't going to stop NZ's decline towards becoming an economic basket case.  Nor will his casual approach or total reluctance to accept any sort of responsibility for the decisions he makes or the actions of his ministers. Key has always tried to take the line of least resistance when setting policy to ensure his all-important personal popularity will stay intact.  I can only hope that NZ voters are smart enough to see through the ruse, but given the idiotic response of most NZers once Maori got involved over the proposed asset sales, I don't hold out much hope.

Also discouraging is Labour's almost complete inability to articulate a response to the situation.  I thought they might catch onto something when Key so flippantly described "Planet Key", showing just where he seems to think NZers priorities lie and how out of touch with the country's problems he really is, but they utterly failed to capitalise.  What we are left with is a government, led by a man who has just demonstrated he is devoid of integrity, which is selling out NZ's future to stay in power today and an opposition who are unable to come up with ideas which are compellingly different.

Saturday, 8 September 2012

Everyone's Fault But Mine

One of my favourite Homer Simpson quotes of all times is, after having done something foolish, he whines "this is everyone's fault but mine".  The bad news is that it's also most NZers favourite phrase.  Everything is someone else's fault, someone else is to blame, my woes are the result of someone else's actions.
Who is getting most of the blame at the moment?  Yep, it's Maori again.

Recently, and foolishly, I got involved in a "debate" on facebook concerning the "treaty gravy train".  Apparently "in years to come our crippled country will look back scratching our heads wondering why we didn't stop such an obvious and ongoing blight on our economy".   Eh?!

The view that Maori treaty claims are a crippling and overwhelming burden on the poor old taxpayer is a common one, but how does is stand up to some facts?  I decided to point some out: so far TOTAL treaty claims have cost the taxpayer around about $NZ1 billion.  Sound like a lot?  Well it's about 4 weeks worth of the health budget.  So far a total of 5.5 DAYS of your tax revenue has been paid out in treaty claims.  Hell, you want to talk about obvious and ongoing blights which will cripple the NZ economy?  Well, NZ Super Costs about $9 billion per year ("I paid tax my whole life.  I'm ENTITLED to it".  Grrrr....).  You can bet a fair proportion of those rattling their sabres about the "treaty gravy train" are pocketing NZ Super to pay for this years trip to the Gold Coast.  And how about the bail out of South Canterbury Finance investors by the foolish Retail Deposit Guarantee Scheme which enables investors to make ridiculous investments at almost no risk?  You can bet there weren't too many maori on that particular gravy train.

Let's look at the biggest treaty settlement to Ngai Tahu.  The tribe settled on $170 million which was chump change compared to the $20 billion in assets which were independently assessed to have been ILLEGALLY  taken from them (and, let's be clear: an agreement doesn't cease to be binding just because it becomes inconvenient for one of the signatories).  Ngai Tahu Holdings now, as best as I can tell, contributes about $100 million in tax each year.  Crickey, did we give them enough?!  Even if Ngai Tahu had received all of the $1 billion in settlements so far, a 10% annual return on investment would be stunning not to mention the near 60% return the "poor, overburdened" NZ taxpayer is getting.

No one in the facebook debate took too kindly to being presented with such inconvenient facts.  I was told "you've made your point, now back off", another of other "points" which totally ignore facts were made and shortly later I received an abusive and threatening (and anonymous) e-mail for my troubles.  I should have known better: another key attribute of your average NZer is that he/she is at least somewhat anti-science, anti-fact and prefers to make arguments based on emotion and feeling.

If this country does indeed become a "crippled" cot case, and I'm not confident that it won't, then it won't be the fault of maori.  It won't be the fault of beneficiaries.  It won't be the fault of immigrants.  It'll be the fault of you and me, white NZ.  It'll be the fault of a group of people who have developed a whiny entitlement culture  (after all, you hear the call for "compensation" for something or other as frequently from pakeha as from maori).  It'll be the fault of a generation who did nothing to develop NZ's economy or industry, instead preferring to rob the subsequent generations of their wealth via property investment.  It'll be the fault of a people who elected "leaders" based on a popularity contest rather than a vision.  It'll be the fault of our deeply ingrained environmental hypocrisy (how often have you seen "No fracking" or "No deep sea drilling" bumper stickers of SUVs lately?).  

Rant complete.