Tag Archives: australia

Another Planet

Just 31% of renewable biofuel being sold in the UK market is making sustainability targets according to a new report. Edie.net reports that research by the Renewable Fuels Agency (RFA) criticises BP, Chevron, Murco, Total, INEOS and Morgan for all missing three sustainability performance targets set as part of the UK’s Renewable Transport Fuel Obligation (RTFO).  One of the worst performers identified is Murco, which failed to report any fuel meeting the Renewable Transport Fuel Obligation (RTFO)Environmental Qualifying Standard. According to the RFA, one of a swathe of Government funded bodies to lose financial backing last year, the fuel industry as a whole is ‘not keeping up’ with targets designed to encourage more sustainable biofuels. Despite the poor performance by many, the report also identifies suppliers who are demonstrating what can be achieved – Greenergy and Shell undertook independent sustainability audits of Brazilian sugar cane with Shell also carrying out independent audits of German oilseed rape.  Lissan and Topaz supplied all of their fuel from wastes and by-products. There are also many companies supplying only biofuels and meeting all three sustainability targets – this includes all companies supplying solely biodiesel from used cooking oil or tallow.
www.edie.net

Australia has been hammered by more freak weather: One of Australia’s biggest storms has brought severe rainfall to a stretch of the coast more than 190 miles long in North Queensland. “This is a cyclone of savagery and intensity,” Prime Minister Julia Gillard said in a nationally television news conference before the storm hit. “People are facing some really dreadful hours in front of them.” Cyclone Yasi roared toward the coast bearing destructive winds gusting up to 180 mph. Satellite tracking showed a front some 300 miles across, with an eye that officials said would take around an hour to pass over any one point. Thousands pf people have evacuated their homes. It also will lash the coast with up to 28 inches of rain, and is predicted to send tidal surges far deeper inland than usual, the Bureau of Meteorology said. Queensland Premier Anna Bligh said “It’s such a big storm – it’s a monster, killer storm” adding that the only previous storm measured in the state at such strength was in 1918 “This impact is likely to be more life threatening than any experienced during recent generations”. For months, Queensland has been in the grip of one of Australia’s largest, most costly natural disasters. Tropical rains that began in November have flooded an area larger than France and Germany combined, destroying homes, isolating towns and virtually paralysing the state’s lucrative coal industry. Last month, flash flooding inundated several towns in the state’s south, including the capital, Brisbane, destroying some 30,000 homes and businesses and killing 35 people.

The UK may have to face the scenario of its own marine pollution disaster where up to 180 million gallons of oil could spill out into the North Sea if there is a disaster or blow out at the proposed Cambo 4 drilling platform which will be operated by Hess, a US Company, in the Shetlands. Can’t happen I hear you say – ermmmm – Gulf of Mexico anyone?  See the Times (4th February 2011 for more).

A study by the University of California shows that 85% of the world’s oyster beds have disappeared from  estuaries and bays . The problem has been the dredging of natural habitats on the shoreline, and the replacement of native species with farmed stock – with the Pacific oyster now preferred. These new species have now been hit by an outbreak of a new form of herpes across Europe. In France oystermen are losing 90% of all juveniles to the disease.  The famous oyster beds of Whitstable were hit last summer and although the now endangered native species is not affected, it too is in decline. Nick Cordes, who is one of the Glastonbury Festival  photographers and whose pictures sometimes grace these web pages, was an oysterman and wrote and photographed a lovely book ‘Diary of a Native Oysterman 1993 – 1996’ a few years ago in 1998 when he was the last Whitstable born oysterman still working on the oyster beds for Seasalter Shellfish.   700 million oysters were consumed in Britain in 1864 – by the 1960s this had dropped to 3 million and catches have not recovered.

It seems that the UK government couldn’t wait to consult anyone on selling off our woodlands – and have sold quite a few already – with complaints coming in that local people didn’t even know the woodlands and forestry was for sale by the Forestry Commission.  I heard about this a couple of weeks ago when speaking to a some local farmers and this seem outrageous if sales were made secretly. You know what – usually a bit of competition puts UP prices and brings in a better price. Indeed we have been looking for woodland for our ‘Festivals Wood’ project and the prices offered by one of the alleged beneficiaries of this early sale have been sky high – and yet they seem to have been able to buy the woodland cheaply in these secret sales.  Sales of 44 woodlands sites totally more than 4,000 acres were made – and it seems there are 20 more sales in place but yet to be completed. It does seem now that the Coalition government is a little bit shaken by the public outcry over new sales and have promised t maintain public access and not sell of  special sites – but there still doesn’t seem to be any effective mechanisms in place to allow local residents or charities like the National Trust and the RSPB to bid for local woodlands – or indeed that sales are handled properly. If we are going to have to sell them, the taxpayer might as well get some benefit. So now it’s a double whammy – we (the public) have lost the forests AND not been paid a proper price. Wow. I am fast going off Caroline Spelman, the minister “in charge”.

There was an interesting letter in the Times newspaper (Saturday 5th February) titled ‘Fish Farms and the decline of wild fish’ pointing out that rather than being the salvation of fish stocks in our oceans, fish farms are actually depleting the seas as they send out boats to harvest ‘cheap’ fish like anchovies, sand eels, capelin and sardines to turn into feed for luxury farmed fish such as salmon. It seems US and European fish farms need 2-3kg of wild fish to feed up just 1kg farmed salmon – and that rises to 10kg  of fishmeal to produce 1kg of farmed fish in Chile.  With the fish farming industry now targeting krill – which is one of the building blocks of the marine eco-system, the future of our marine life might now be at risk.

Finally with news that the University of British Columbia have found the Arctic fish stocks are being deleted far quicker than figures available from the United Nation Food and Agriculture Agency show,  it seems right to remember that wise Cree Indian prophecy  -  Only when the last tree has been cut down, Only when the last river has been poisoned, Only when the last fish has been caught, Only then will you find that we cannot eat money …

First Greener Festival Awards for 2010 out!

The first winners of the Greener Festival Award 2010 have been announced – and we have a record breaking eight Australian festivals getting our prestigious Award, topped by Peats Ridge Festival whose team win our outstanding Award for 2010. These brilliant festivals eventually made the grade in Australia  (nearly double the number of last year) are a testament to the real efforts Australian festivals are making to get green clean, and lead the fight against climate change. The winners are Bluesfest, The Falls Festival (on two sites) WOMADelaide, Southbound, Fairbridge, Island Vibe, Blues n Roots and Peats Ridge.

Our Awards Organiser in Australia, Amie, adds this: “Due to Australia’s magnificent size, 5 new assessors put their eco-credentials to good use in the 2009/2010 festival season here, helping us to collect data from states around the vast continent. Our motley crew is female dominated, not because we have anything against the boys but that’s the just the way its turned out. With a steady increase of participating festivals, up to 8 from 5 last season, and with festivals from 6 states covering distances of over 5,000kms (around 3,000 miles) the sheer magnitude of assessing events over this kind of space without flying or otherwise pumping out carbon emissions is our biggest challenge. That’s where my girls come into it. The process usually starts pretty quickly after a festival has contacted me with a desire to be involved and assessors are usually found through friends of friends. All of our assessors have a passion for the environment and most have had some experience with the workings of the music industry. But the key recruiting factor is a desire to get involved. Once contact has been made training on   what is expected of the assessors and how they might go about this takes place. Access to a help-sheet, which details practical advice for the first-time assessor as well as looking over some previous assessments to gain an understanding of what level of detail is needed. It is at this point that assessors are asked to clarify key words so they are clear in their meaning in this context. Please bear in mind that all of the above goes ahead via email or occasionally phone. In fact I couldn’t actually tell you what two of my assessors even look like. We’ve never met face to face. But despite that I can tell you they’re dedicated and professional and carpooled to get to each festival they attended. And their smiles look like this :D

The final part of the mentoring process involves developing the attitude of fair and impartial information hunter. This skill is honed by experience and every festival that takes part in the Awards scheme plays it’s part in educating assessors into an unbiased mindframe. Festivals are only ever awarded marks on their own merits and not comparatively. Of course the comparisons come later when the Outstanding award winner is announced. It’s good to encourage a bit of a healthy competitive spirit and the Auzzie festivals in particular thrive on it. Although I am suitably impressed with the Outstanding award winners it is the Improving festivals that I am most proud of. Those first tentative steps, be it writing the festivals first environmental policy or designing a waste management program that focusses on recycling and re-use, or even moving to a new site and modifying all existing systems takes an enormous amount of mettle and determination.

But I alone cannot claim to be producing such a rare batch of volunteer assessors. Naturally the obliging sustainability co-ordinators of events such as Falls, Fairbridge and Bluesfest have been of enormous benefit to these new assessors, as they act as their ‘go to men’ on site by providing endless hospitality, showing them around their site and chasing up reports and information from outside contractors. These conversations, no matter how brief, builds the relationship between AGF and festivals trying their hardest to outgreen their previous years efforts. The interaction between assessor and festival is all important as green ideas and solutions are discussed and each assessor gains a deeper understanding of the operational side of event management. Having a large team of assessors has its benefits. Each assessor is able to spend a decent amount of time at each festival (the vast majority being held over at least two days) and really get a good feel for the overall vibe of the event. This helps them answer the overarching ethos behind each assessment, namely that the festival promotes environmental sustainability and efficiency. By being on site for a protracted amount of time, assessors are granted the ability to measure the success of initiatives, such as contain deposit systems or campsite clean-ups, over the lifespan of the entire festival. This gives AGF a richness of data to not only compare festival against festival but also to provide milestones for year-on-year improvements so that an assessor returning next season (yet another unforeseen benefit of having such a sprawling network of AGF volunteers) can see real measurable improvements. Despite all this, by far the biggest benefit of having volunteers ready to delve into festivals left, right and centre is the inspiring ideas that they bring to the table.

Take our newest recruit, Heidi [not literally, we love her!]. Heidi’s background in fashion led her to instigate a relationship between Bamboo Boutique-producers of eco-conscious clothing produced right here in on the Gold Coast of Australia- and A Greener Festival. She recognized that assessors wearing an AGF logo were more likely to attract attention in a positive way to the environmental efforts of an event. Promotors, patrons and crew alike are reminded of the lengths festivals go to

to lessen the impact on their immediate surrounding area as well as on a global scale. And the more people know about AGF the better.”

Bluesfest: Bluesfest has been held in Byron Bay, New South Wales for the last 20 years, but they will celebrate their 21st birthday for the first time on their own site. The approximately 120 hectares of land is managed through a team of consultants with huge passion for their community, local culture and the delivery of excellent entertainment within sustainable & environmentally minded goals. Some initiatives put in place by the Bluefest team include; printing programmes on 100% recycled paper, green ticket options to offset transport related emissions and beginning an Australian first Koala plan of management (KPoM) study, which looks set to continue for the next 3 years.

The Falls Festival: The environment is very close to the heart of The Falls Festival which boasts two of Australia’s most incredible natural environment venues, one in Lorne, Victoria and one in Marion Bay, Tasmania. The Festival protects the surrounding flora and fauna through projects of revegitation and has incorporated a worm farm to help with the composting of biodegradable waste. Water initiatives are noteworthy as taps are available all over the campsite with rainwater that is drinkable and outside showers are all rainwater, cold and have timers on them. The Falls really do reach beyond the festival and help make the world a better place by using this wonderful opportunity to pass on important information and ideas to hundreds of thousands of people over the years. 

Island Vibe: A new entrant for the 2009/2010ʼs award season and the first to represent the state of Queenland. Operating from North Strandbroke Island, sustainable logistics are a little more costly to implement by Island Vibe have done an amazing job by making sure beer and other beverages are drunk from reusable cups, ensuring our market vendors lead the way through use of biodegradable products, plates, detergents and packaging, and collecting all organic waste and donating it to the first ever Stradbroke Island Community Gardens and finally aiming for a plastic bag free event.

Peats Ridge Festival: Peats Ridge Festival is one of those events where you know you’re going to be getting down and getting dirty but it’s all in such an enlightened way that you really feel good about reveling. Some of the artwork is just fabulous, a tree made out of recycled mobile phones, the trash Temple-an inflatable stage made from last years left over tents and bunting from recycled banners. Walking from organic food stalls, drinking your refillable Love One water-all profits fund drinking well pumps in Africa- and eating organic local produce from the Eden mini-market. Shopping is bought fro Sydney market stall holders selling bags who previous lives included inner tubes and the Eco-living area expands the mind where you can do a workshop with vibrant permaculture enthusiasts, brush up on your composting skills or ask questions about sustainable housing. Peats Ridge Festival really does include a greener alternative to everything.

Southbound: Sunset Events are taking the environmental impact of their festivals and events seriously and Southbound is a case in point. After last years wildly successful Ecobound initiative, Southbound have continued this year’s efforts by working with Greensense, an environmental auditing company, to directly measure their impact and work on lessening it year-on-year. Greenhouse gas, water and waste analysis’ were all undertaken in a bid to provide benchmark figures and aid in the generation of even more green initiatives next year.

Blues ‘n’ Roots: This year’s West Coast Blues and Roots Festival was held at the new venue of Fremantle Park and was as always a great success. Audience members of all ages made full use of the grassy green banks sitting back to relax and soak up with friends the awesome sights and sounds the festival had to offer. Food stall and market stalls showed that the organizers definitely had an environmental conscious and the festival was trying to make as little impact as possible. Green money vouchers were distributed worth approx $2500, with this money going towards the green roots program which keeps it’s self busy collecting and cleaning up after the 21,000 strong audience.

WOMADelaide: This year’s event had an extra 40 volunteers as crowd controllers to patrol the festival to keep any patrons from doing damage to the beautiful park contained within the heart of Adelaide’s CBD. WOMADelaide tries extremely hard to please the patrons in every area by looking over feedback forms at the end of each day and at the end of the festival to see where any improvements can be made. A through carbon auditing process is undertaken and knowing that transport has the biggest impact on the environment they provide over 700 free bicycle parking spaces and restrict parking at theevent site.

Fairbridge Festival: Fairbridge is a unique festival situated about 300 kms south of Perth, and the third festival in Western Australia to receive a Greener Festival award. The festival is staffed entirely by volunteers who are responsible for protecting local waterways from contamination, processing the waste and recycling and co-ordinating all sustainable practices. Buggies, bikes and buses are the main means of getting around the festival site which also scored highly in Land and local environment protection. Committed to ongoing change, Fairbridge Festival use the AGF assessment as a template for improving practices.

Congratululations to Australia and all of our winning festivals and THANK YOU to Amie and her team.

Massive Australian oil slick threatens sealife

dolphin2A massive oil spill from a ruptured well  125 miles off the North coast of Australia is proving to be a massive threat to wildlife. The Montara rig, operated by PTTEP Australia, ruptured on August 21st and millions of litres of oil are continuing to pour into the Timor Sea at a rate of anything up to 2000 barrels a day in an environmental disaster that threatens birds, mammals, fish stocks and other marine life.  The oil slick already covers 5,800 square miles (15,000 square kilometers) and environmental scientists say that even when the rupture is healed, the effects of the spill will take many years to unfold.

Australia’s Greenfest launch postponed to 26th April

greenfestGREENFEST LAUNCH POSTPONED UNTIL SUNDAY 26TH APRIL

With heavy rain and more rain forecast, the launch of Greenfest has been postponed.

Come and enjoy Australia’s leading new band The Boat People http://www.myspace.com/theboatpeople and family favourite Bunna Lawrie http://www.myspace.com/bunnalawrie for free at the Greenfest 2009 program launch, as part of the Brisbane City Council’s community fair this Sunday 26th April. Bring your friends and family to enjoy the following fun free Sunday morning together.

What: Free concert to launch Greenfest 2009 Program at Brisbane City Councils Community Fair

When: 10:00am to 1pm Sunday 26th April

Where: Perrin Park, Josling St, Taringa

Free plants and sustainability exhibitors as part of BCC Community Fair Exhibitors from Greenfest’s lineup of over 200 exhibitors including: Local inventors with a claimed 20% efficiency gain for combustion engines via new retro fit mechanics / Local innovator with world’s first air to water machine, produces 12 liters of water per day from one solar panel / Greencross and the extreme weather heroes / Australian Certified Organic / Peppermint eco fashion magazine / Solar cooking with solar BBQ’s / Electric scooters with Ecomotion Fair trade and upcycled goods with Siham Craft Link / Community farming with Food Connect / Bauer’s organic farm / Sustainable Insight eco-bookstore / Greenfest team with free hats, CDs and program launch for 2009 and share the letter from Achim Steiner (UN) congratulating Brisbane on the initiative.

Get into Greenfest at www.greenfest.com.au