It took me quite a long time of sleuthing to track down this article wchi certainly didn't make it into the headlines.
It
certainly should be in the headlines.
Although
everything is expressed in nice civilsed ways to hide the impact
there is no doubt that this is fascism in action.
Can
you really say you live in a democracy when leading scientists and
academics are silenced.
In
fact the silencing of scientist goes back a few years
JimSalinger is an Auckland-based climate change scientist who formerly
worked for . He is NZ's foremost researcher in climate change who
used to work for the Crown Research Institute National Institute of
Water and Atmospheric Research (NIWA) until he was sacked in 2009
(under this very government) for speaking to the press.
Climate scientist fired for talking to media
The comments by scientists show just how endemic this is.
Fears
proposed code could gag science
Some
scientists fear a proposed code governing what they can speak out
about is actually an attempt to gag them.
2
October, 2014
The
idea is referred to as the 'code for public engagement', and could
sit alongside the Royal Society's existing Code of Ethics.
The
Prime Minister's chief science advisor Sir Peter Gluckman said the
Royal Society has been asked to look at its current Code of Ethics
and decide if it is up to scratch. If it is not, then consultation
will begin on a new code.
Some
scientists fear a proposed code governing what they can speak out
about is an attempt to gag them. Photo: SCIENCE
PHOTO
Sir
Peter said scientists have no need to feel they will be gagged under
the proposed guidelines and that it will be up to the Royal Society
to decide whether to create the new code or stick with its existing
Code of Ethics.
The
proposed new code is, according to Sir Peter, becoming common
practise around the world because governments are concerned that
scientists are straying into advocacy rather than sticking to their
expertise.
Sir
Peter said countries across the globe are reviewing codes of ethics
after comments made by scientists about a major Italian earthquake
and Japan's 2011 tsunami and earthquake.
And
scientists in New Zealand are not immune to straying outside of their
areas of expertise either, he said.
Sir
Peter said the new code would encourage scientists to speak out, but
give them guidelines for doing so.
Sir
Peter Gluckman.
Photo: SUPPLIED
Concern among scientists
The
existing Code of Ethics states that scientists may only represent
themselves as experts in their fields of competence, must be fair and
balanced, declare any conflicts of interest and ensure their public
statements are supported by research.
Scientists
spoken to by Radio New Zealand said there is no need
for a new code and some fear that such a code is actually a way to
rein them in.
Academics
are allowed to speak out because of clauses in their contracts that
encourage them to be the "critics and conscience of society".
And
scientists working for government institutes rarely talk to the media
about controversial topics, are not allowed to speak two months
before an election. Before speaking to media they also have to get
permission from their organisation.
Dr
Mike Joy is a freshwater ecologist who has spoken about water quality
and often disagrees with the government.
One
government lobbyist described him as the "foot and mouth disease
of the tourism industry"; Prime Minister John Key has claimed Dr
Joy's data may not be factually correct and trade minister Tim Groser
described him as "deeply unhelpful."
Dr
Joy however, believes the current code is thorough enough and
suspects the new code is a way for the government to silence its
critics.
Dr
Siousxie Wiles won the Prime Minister's Science Communication Prize
last year. She agrees with Dr Joy that the existing Code of Ethics
covers all that is needed. And she too wonders if the code is
intended to rein in scientists.
Professor
Shaun Hendy from Auckland University hopes the new code will
encourage scientists to speak out, rather than rein them in.
He
said the Fonterra botulism scare last year showed that there was a
problem with scientists' freedom of speech.
He
said in that case, the experts either were working for Fonterra, or
for government agencies, and so did not feel comfortable speaking out
about the contamination.
He
is concerned there is now a climate where scientists are not
encouraged to talk about controversial or difficult subjects.
In the meantime, we can expect more of this - 'pesky greenies' getting in the way of unfettered exploitation and rape of our resources.
I mean to say, after Deepwater Horizon, who would want any checks and balances to the oil industry put in place?!
"Green tape" said to be strangling oil and gas industry
An
energy conference in Auckland has heard a scathing attack on what's
termed as bureaucratic "green tape," amid claims it's
slowly strangling the oil and gas industry
The results of the election are scarcely out and Key's "rock-star economy" is going down the toilet.
See how dairy prices are going down while national debt is moving (perhaps even more quickly) in the opposite direction.
Dairy price plunge 'a kick in the guts' for farmers
Federated
Farmers dairy chair Andrew Hoggard says a major drop in prices at
last night's GlobalDairyTrade auction is "a kick in the guts"
for farmers.
NZ
Herald,
1
October, 2014
"There's
no way to dress this up as anything but a kick in the guts," said Hoggard.
International
dairy prices fell back to levels not seen since May 2012 at the
overnight GDT auction, bringing with it a fresh wave of selling in an
already weakened New Zealand dollar.
The
GDT price index dropped by 7.3 per cent since the last auction to
US$2599 a tonne, making for a 48.5 per cent decline since prices
peaked in February.
"Unlike
most of our competitors who are subsidised there's not one Kiwi
farmer looking for a hand-out. We may not like what prices are doing
but we know this is market forces at work and while it often runs in
our favour, this season it isn't," Hoggard said
He
said "dislocated European milk" resulting from the crisis
in war-torn eastern Ukraine was having a big impact on international
dairy prices.
"This
is the auction result that brings the chickens roosting in the
Eastern Ukraine home to us on-farm."
In
wholemilk - the most important product for New Zealand dairy farmers
- the price of powder fell by 10 per cent to US$2443 a tonne since
the last auction two weeks ago.
Last
week, Fonterra said it had revised its forecast farmgate milk price
for 2014/15 to $5.30 a kg of milk solids from a previous forecast of
$6.00 a kg.
The
cooperative said then that wholemilk powder prices would need to
reach US$3500 a tonne by March next year if the forecast was to be
achieved.
The
price of skimmed milk powder - an important line for the country's
second biggest dairy co-operative - Westland Milk - fell by 2.7 per
cent to an average price US$2,540 a tonne.
Price
falls were across the board. Buttermilk powder prices dropped by 11.3
per cent to US$2723 a tonne and sweet whey powder prices by 9.3 per
cent to US$1,175 a tonne.
BNZ
currency market strategists said the New Zealand dollar, having
pushed higher to US78.60c last night, fell to as low as US77.80c
after the GDT result. By early morning the currency had regained
ground to trade at US78.00c.
AgriHQ
dairy analyst Susan Kilsby said stocks of dairy commodities were
building across the globe due to Russia's current ban on importing
dairy products from many Western nations, and a lack of urgency from
Chinese buyers, while at the same time global milk supplies are
expanding.
The
AgriHQ Seasonal Farmgate Milk Price for the 2014-15 season fell by 5
cents to $5.05 per kg of milk solids following the GDT auction,
indicating that if the latest GDT prices were achieved across the
entire season the milk price would be just $3.90/kg.
"The
volume of whole milk powder being offered on GDT is at its seasonal
peak and buyer demand is simply not strong enough at present to clear
the large volumes without prices being impacted," Kilsby said in
a research note.
"A
farmgate milk price of $5.05/kgMS means that most farms will be
barely covering costs of production meaning there will be virtually
no cash available for debt repayments or discretionary spending such
as upgrading plant and equipment," according to Kilsby.
ANZ
rural economist Con Wiliams said the failure of global dairy prices
to recover added further downside risk to Fonterra's already-reduced
2014/15 milk price forecast.
Based
on the auction's outcome, ANZ reduced its forecast for the 2014/15
payout to $4.85/kg, "assuming a modest bounce back in global
prices".
"This
sits well below the average cost of production for farmers and will
have a significant impact on discretionary spending," ANZ rural
economist Con Williams said. ANZ estimated that about 70 per cent of
the dairy sector has exposure to floating interest rates.
"A
lower dairy price also has significant implications for the wider
economy and monetary policy," ANZ said.
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