As I turned the radio on this morning the news was full of bad news - none of it a suprise.
Firstly, the el-Nino was acknowledged (sort of) while climate change was not.
Concerns over strong El Nino
NIWA
fears this year's El Nino may be as bad as 18 years ago, when
widespread drought cost the country a billion dollars in lost exports
1
August, 2015
The
research agency said guidelines indicated a 97 percent chance of the
El Niño weather pattern continuing for the next three months, and a
90 percent chance it would continue over summer.
An
El Nino typically sees the west wet, and the east very dry.
NIWA
fears this years El Nino may be as bad as the one in 1997/98 when
there was widespread droughts costing the country about a billion
dollars in lost export.
International
guidelines indicate a 97 per cent chance of El Niño continuing over
the next three months and a 90 per cent chance it will continue over
summer.
El
Nino typically sees the west of New Zealand wet, and the east very
dry.
Niwa's
forecaster, Chris Brandolino said it was looking like it could be as
significant as the El Nino in the nineties.
"There
are some indications it could be a very strong El Nino, it could
rival the 97/98 one. It is probably premature to say that for sure,
but some of the ingredients for that are in place.
"That
is mainly the unusually warm water temperatures east of the date
line. That is the fuel which sets off a chain reaction starting with
more rainfall. That has a domino effect, which could have
consequences for New Zealand.
"A
strong El Nino doesn't always mean strong impacts.
"In
other parts of the world there is a connection between strong El Nino
and strong impacts, in New Zealand we can have strong impacts during
a strong or weak El Nino."
There goes our coal industry, the first part of our 'rockstar economy' to go belly-up- which has been left to collapse under its own steam by the present government.
Solid Energy raises possibility of liquidation
Debt-ridden
state-owned enterprise Solid Energy has raised the prospect it could
be liquidated.
1
August, 2015
In
a statement, the company said it had told staff three options were on
the table.
The statement stressed no
final decision had been made, and there was no timeline for doing so.
However, Engineering,
Printing and Manufacturing Union (EPMU) West Coast organiser Garth
Elliott said he expected a decision within weeks.
"The rumours did
come out earlier this week that the company was going into
liquidation, so I called the head of HR and she assured me that the
company had not made a decision," he said.
"But I understand
within weeks a decision will be made."
Workers
attend a meeting about job losses at Stockton Mine in May 2015.
Photo: RNZ
/ Georgina Stylianou
In April, Finance
Minister Bill English ruled out the Government putting more money
into the company, which is struggling to service about $320 million
of debt.
Mr English would not
comment last night.
The Labour Party's
spokesperson for state-owned enterprises, Clayton Cosgrove, said the
Government had run a company that used to turn a profit into the
ground.
He said someone needed to
be held to account.
"This potentially
has a knock-on effect to other entities like KiwiRail, businesses,
suppliers to Solid Energy and it appears the only people paying the
price for the incompetence, lack of governmental oversight and
mismanagement are the local communities and workers."
The falling
coal price has
led to Mr English attending regular briefings on Solid Energy's
financial state for more than a year and a half.
Its viability was
questioned in April after revelations former chair Pip Dunphy quit
because she did not believe any more could be done for the company.
Solid Energy has already
cut almost 300 jobs at Stockton Mine on the West Coast.
Huge
trucks carry high-grade coal at Solid Energy's Stockton Mine in 2009.
And the news that we don't want. The potential to drill for oil
off our coasts - and for a major oil spill for which there is (and
can be) no plan
Major oil potential in Canterbury Basin
New
Zealand Oil and Gas has flagged a potentially significant oil find
off the coast of Canterbury.
30
July, 2015
The
company said the Barque prospect in the Canterbury Basin contained
three prospective formations, which it said had the potential to be
the largest hydrocarbon discovery in New Zealand to date.
The
energy exploration company said it was still early days, but the
Barque prospect appeared promising.
It
said the largest of the three formations it had assessed may contain
the equivalent of 530 million barrels of oil.
It
hopes to drill the site, which is 60 kilometres from shore and
between 2500 and 3000 metres below sea level, in 2017.
The
company said it was in discussions with potential partners who had
significant experience in operating in such environments.
The
company also revealed it had assumed control of Australian-based
explorer Cue Energy after acquiring a 48 percent holding. It now has
three representatives on Cue's five-member board of directors.
The
company's quarterly report also showed net operating cash flows of
$1.4 million in the June quarter, and $8.6 million for the year.
Tasers policy 'rushed in', says campaigner
A
civil liberties campaigner says the move to have front-line officers
carry tasers at all times while on duty has been rushed in without
public debate.
1
August, 2015
Until
now, they have only had access to them from lockboxes kept in
vehicles.
Barry
Wilson, from the Auckland Council for Civil Liberties, said it was a
major change in public policy and should have been introduced as a
law change only after a proper debate in parliament.
He
said there had already been cases where officers had broken protocols
and used excessive force with their tasers.
Mr
Wilson feared it was a step closer to arming the police with guns.
The
roll-out of the new policy began yesterday, though it could be weeks
or even months before all front-line officers are carrying tasers.
And the further slide in this country with the corruption and use by the executive for political ends. Our leading investigative journalist gets raided by police while right-wing scumbag blogger, Cameron Slater gets away with theft under plain view and is left untouched by the Law
And the further slide in this country with the corruption and use by the executive for political ends. Our leading investigative journalist gets raided by police while right-wing scumbag blogger, Cameron Slater gets away with theft under plain view and is left untouched by the Law
Response to Dirty Politics claims 'inadequate'
The
Labour Party says police's refusal to take further action about
allegations made in Nicky Hager's book Dirty Politics is deeply
unsatisfactory.
1
August, 2015
Senior
Labour MP David Parker wrote to police in September last year to ask
them to look into allegations made in the book, which include the
hacking of the party's computer system.
Police
responded yesterday with a letter saying the computer breach raised
privacy and ethical issues, but there was no evidence of criminal
offending.
Labour
general secretary Tim Barnett said that response took far too long
and was a dismissive way to treat serious allegations.
He
said the police closing the case was not the end of the matter for
the party, which would be taking further action.
And then there's the TPP and a government that is determined to sell off our democratic rights and our nation's sovereignty for - it seems, NOTHING
Groser should pack up and leave TPP without good dairy deal - but he probably won't
The
TPP has the potential to transform the economies of the 12
Asia-Pacific nations - but the devil, as always, is in the fine
print.
31
July, 2015
It
shouldn't take much for Tim Groser to exercise his theatrical talents
and tip the chess board over and walk away from the Trans Pacific
Partnership talks if New Zealand does not get a decent deal on dairy
access.
The
ministerial negotiations in Maui are timetabled to finish early this
afternoon with a news conference to be screened on YouTube.
But
realpolitik dictates that the trade minister and his boss Prime
Minister John Key are more likely to opt for a sub-optimal deal
rather than walk away empty-handed from the lengthy negotiations.
That's because both politicians have invested substantial personal
political capital in chalking up a TPP outcome.
New
Zealand has a natural interest in getting to the finishing line on a
race it started.
The
problem is it's quite unclear whether the gains from greater access
for New Zealand dairy interests in Asia Pacific markets which are
currently heavily protected - such as Canada, Japan and to a lesser
extent the US - will offset the impact on some of the country's other
economic interests that will inevitably be affected during the TPP
trade-offs.
The
US did not help the dairy negotiations by withdrawing an offer it
previously made to Australia for increased dairy access. The
conjecture was that US Government officials could not sell the move
if Canada and Japan did not also reduce their dairy barriers.
New
Zealand has been playing at brinkmanship in what has been billed as
the TPP endgame. But so have the other 11 nations - something which
is frequently overlooked. The negotiations are not binary.
When
the intention to form the Trans Pacific Partnership was first
announced in New York in 2008, former Labour trade minister Phil Goff
said New Zealand would pursue a comprehensive and high-quality
agreement; this negotiating position was underlined when Groser
succeeded him at the 2008 election.
Unsurprisingly,
the partnership agreement has since morphed to provide some new rules
for the economic integration which is already under way in the Asia
Pacific region. But what the United States has billed as a 21st
century free trade agreement has become a platform for the other
nations to dance to the US playbook when it comes to complex
commercial areas like intellectual property. New Zealand has largely
gone along with this.
But
there is little evidence in the various economic studies that have
been published on TPP as to where the upside will be for New
Zealand's ICT entrepreneurs and others who are leveraging the digital
age.
Cabinet
ministers have also not made a strong case for the TPP. It is only
now as the endgame is in play that Key has fronted up and said the
Government would fund any changes which bump up the prices New
Zealand will have to pay for some medicines as a result of the TPP.
In the past, Key has obfuscated. Fronting up makes sense when the
talks are themselves bedevilled by leaks from parties seeking to
overturn particular negotiating lines or advance their own interests.
Groser
has had little of substance to say since the talks began.
It
was left to New Zealand's agricultural trade envoy Mike Petersen to
fly a red flag by telling Inside U.S. Trade that the Key Government
had signalled it was willing to delay the conclusion of the deal
beyond this week's ministerial negotiations. Particularly if pushing
the talks out into August would pave the way to securing an
acceptable outcome on dairy market access.
The
US Trade Representative's office has booked a slot on YouTube for a
live news conference from Maui early this afternoon - complete with a
live countdown - on the outcome of the TPP negotiations. This is a
useful piece of pressure tactics from the US side.
But
at the time this column was written there had yet to be a
breakthrough on dairy which New Zealand politicians and officials
have determined is the major benefit for the country from the
negotiations.
The
TPP has the potential to transform the economies of the 12
Asia-Pacific nations. It can also help to progress the World Trade
Organisation's multilateral negotiations which have essentially been
stuck in a groove. But the devil, as always, is in the fine print.
Meanwhile the key factor in the 'rockstar economy' is going to hell in a handbasket. Milk commodithy prices are falling throught the floor and farmers who have borrowed on the promise of everlasting propsperity are faced with going to the wall
Kiwi Dollar Falls As Dairy Prices Plunge At Latest Auction
16
July, 2015
The
latest Global Dairy Trade auction was another shocker, the GDT price
index dropping by 10.7% from the last sale a fortnight ago and with
wholemilk powder prices registering their biggest fall in 12 months
Whole milk powder – which is responsible for about 75% of
Fonterra’s farmgate milk price – fell in price by 13.1% to
US$1,848 a tonne to its lowest level in six years. Fonterra’s
current milk price forecast of $5.25 per kg of milksolids for 2015/16
is based on GDT prices reaching about US$3500 a tonne towards the end
of this season. Dairy NZ estimates $5.70 a kg to be the breakeven
point for most farmers. AgriHQ dairy analyst Susan Kilsby said the
auction result was “disastrous”.
“Farmers
now face two consecutive seasons of extremely low milk prices,” she
said in a commentary. “The majority of farmers can’t breakeven at
such a low milk price.” Economists estimate a $1/kg drop in the
milk price equates to about $2 billion less income for dairy farmers.
“Farm debt levels will rise. Rural communities will suffer as
farmers reduce spending to the bare essentials,” Kilsby said.
AgriHQ’s theoretical 2015-16 farmgate milk price has decreased to
$4.22 per kg milksolids – down 83c on a fortnight ago and $1.27
lower than a month ago. The dairy auction result was responsible for
taking around 40 pips off the Kiwi dollar, and the NZ/Australian
dollar cross rate dropped to below A89.50c.
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