Time heals. This happy snap appeared in The Australian last Friday of former Prime Minister Bob Hawke surrounded at a function in Adelaide by a group of smiling former assassins.
Of those captured at the celebration of his 80th birthday all but two — Nick Bolkus and Brian Howe — voted to get him replaced by Paul Keating. Time clearly heals.
A victory for beauty over ugliness. Anyone who has gone on that beautiful drive along the ocean road from Melbourne to Portland will understand how wind farms are creating the new great Australian ugliness. Those praying mantus type wind mills despoil hill after hill and I well understand why local residents keep searching for an endangered parrot whenever a wind farm is mooted for their neighbourhood. But perhaps relief is at hand on aesthetic rather than environmental grounds.
Last week New Zealand’s Environment Court banned the proposed construction of a $NZ2 billion wind farm in Central Otago on the grounds that with 176 giant turbines it was too large for the special landscape values of the Lammermoor Range. Environment Court Judge Jon Jackson said while the Project Hayes wind farm would have some economic benefits the environmental cost was too high.
“The landscape should be protected and we find that is not achieved by the Meridian proposal,” he said.
An interesting sight but … Now I know it was a rattling good bit of gossip when it appeared in the Sunday Telegraph on 1 November but not so great that it deserved being repeated on the Tele ‘s website a week later. I mean — there wasn’t even a picture of this supposedly interesting event.
Steady as she goes. Well I guess we can conclude after the publication of the Morgan and AC Nielsen versions of the state of Australian political opinion that the people have not gone bonkers enough to change their views by seven percentage points in a fortnight as Newspoll indicated last week. The two pollster verdicts this weekend both have support for Labor in two party preferred terms dropping by an insignificant one point. There’s certainly nothing very cheering for an Opposition to know that two out of the three national pollsters have it getting a complete hiding while even that latest Newspoll would see it well and truly beaten.
Once again I will rely on the opinion of the market with the Crikey Election Indicator showing only a slight decline in the probability of a Labor victory — down to 79% from 80% a week ago.
A thumbs up for the designer. The new look of The Australian this morning gets my stamp of approval and I could even understand what the designer explained were his intentions when I watched the video on the paper’s website. As to the content, well I guess that’s a different matter although somehow I always seem to find more stories of interest to put in my breakfast media wrap from The Oz than any other Australian paper.
The Environment Court says it would be better for the Lammermoor Range tobe submerged, then? (no idea what its height above sealevel is 🙂
The generators on Cape Nelson and Cape Bridgewater near Portland have destroyed outstanding landscapes which were among the first in the state to be ‘classified’ by the National Trust of Australia (Vic.). Only in Australia. In Denmark, which has a population about the same as Victoria’s but a coastline many times longer and vast experience with wind turbines, they value their landscapes. Under national planning constraints a 3 kilometre wide exclusion zone applies along the whole length of the Danish coast although nowhere can that coast hold a candle to the dramatic landscapes around the Portland peninsula. The five week VCAT hearings held prior to the Portland Wind Energy Project were a complete waste of time as the Bracks government in Victoria had already decided that the project would go ahead – despite the fact that the Minister for Planning had not seen the capes before the announcement was made that the original proposal would proceed with some minuscule changes. Nothing new in that either. The managing director of Pacific Hydro had not seen Cape Bridgewater before announcing his company’s intentions. In my opinion this was sheer greed. There were other commercially viable sites in the near region (Codrington, for instance, was up and running without compromising a high value scenic coastline) that could have been used instead of some of the state’s most valuable sea and landscapes.
Help!!!
I can’t find Richard’s “breakfast media wrap”any more. I am missing it in the morning.
It’s a never ending source of amazement to me, that so many people find wind towers so ugly.
To me, they’re like giant installation sculptures and are really quite beautiful.
But I can certainly understand that not everyone shares my taste.
I also sometimes ponder, as to whether the sight of them makes some people uneasy, because they’re such a striking image that’s intimately associated with climate change.
Disclaimer:
I live about three Km from a wind farm, and whenever I look out my kitchen window and see those giant blades turning on the horizon, it lifts my spirits and gives me some faint hope for the future.
[I can’t find Richard’s “breakfast media wrap”any more. I am missing it in the morning.]
Simone, he’s continued the media wrap over on his blog. try here.
http://politicalowl.blogspot.com/
Re the new Oz layout – vast, empty, white areas do not a newspaper make.