15.6.07

Reich Wing Nuts

The chief executive of the Australian Nuclear Science and Technology Organisation (ANSTO) says nuclear power is a viable alternative to coal-fired power in Australia.

Anti Nuclear Poster from Australia 1998

But in order for Australia to have a viable nuclear power industry, Ian Smith says four or five nuclear power plants would have to be built on the east coast.

Anti Nuclear Poster from Australia 1978

"This would mean, power stations would go on the main grids and would supply electricity into those main grids. A normal fleet of four or five nuclear stations would produce something in the vicinity of 5,000 mega-watts of power," he said.

Q: How much power does a modern nuclear plant produce and how does that compare with typical coal, hydro power, wind power & solar power? Why do nuclear power, wind power & solar power all "cost" more (in cents per kWhr) than conventional fossil-fuel power?

A: How long is a piece of string? If you install enough wind or solar power stations you can easily compete with nuclear, but what you have is a difference of scale - wind and solar are generally smaller, but you can have more of them. Nuclear costs more because it is a very complicated and dangerous technology. Coal is also a dangerous technology, but it's not complicated. With nuclear, you've got all the mining and related hazards and then you've got the radioactivity that has to be contained - it's 2 to 3 times more expensive then coal. Nuclear will probably never really be cheap, simply because of the safety costs.

Anti Nuclear Poster from Australia  1983

Nuclear power plants require vast amounts of water to keep them cool. Sea water is not viable due to its corrosive nature. Just where is all this fresh water supposed to be coming from in a country that barely has sufficient fresh water for its own population. Are we going to start building massive desalination plants next to these power stations and what will be the cost of those at the end of the day. The Howard goverment already says that desalination plants are to expensive to build for the amount of water they produce. Obviously to expensive for drinking water but not for producing nuclear power when you are sharing in the profits. Dubya and Dubious, what a team.

The thing that is deeply disturbing here is that now that I live in a country of approx. 86 million people which is serviced by eight nuclear power plants I have to wonder why Australia with only 20 million people requires 5 of them. Do our politicians really believe that all Australians are mug punters???

Germany is in the process of closing down their plants at vast cost. About the only thing most Germans are sure about right now is the dire need to abandon nuclear power, evidenced by the "Switch Off and Rethink" mantra stamped on billboards and in newspapers, buzzing from television sets, and crossing people's lips throughout the nation. And tough policies enacted by the red-green government have laid an incredible groundwork for that move -- not just for Europe's wealthiest nation to become nuclear-free in the next 15 years, but for renewable-energy suppliers to double their output to provide one-fifth of Germany's power within the same period.

atomkraft_nein_danke

By mid-century, the country expects to derive more than half of its power from renewables. Between now and 2020, when the last plant is scheduled to close, Germany's nuclear-power stations expect to produce about 6,000 additional tons of spent fuel. In the last five years, thanks to this singular piece of Green legislation, Germany has doubled its production of renewable fuels like wind, solar, geothermal, hydro, and biomass, which now comprise more than 10 percent of the total energy supply. Using essential free-market principles, the country has begun a radical re-mixing of its energy system which, if things go as planned or better, means Germany will be running on at least 65 percent renewables by mid-century.

Currently there are 435 atomic reactors generating electricity in 31 countries across the globe. They fill 6.5 percent of the world's total energy demand and use close to 70,000 tons of enriched uranium per year. Atomic plants produce one-sixth of the total electricity supply -- roughly on par with hydropower.

Just who stands to make all the money from the contruction and running of these new plants in Australia. Here in Germany the main supplier is Siemens, the Australian plants would be in the main be contructed by Westinghouse and Halliburton if Mr Howard had his way.

Westinghouse Electric Company provides fuel, services, technology, plant design, and equipment for the commercial nuclear electric power industry. Siemens owns Westinghouse. Rumsfeld is an ex Board of Directors and a major shareholder. Rumsfeld is, after all, the same man who was photographed shaking hands with Saddam Hussein back in the 80’s when America was selling him arms. If the reports are true, these may have included biological agents such as the germs for anthrax and botulism — from what I’ve read, the UN reports following the first Gulf War indicated that the biological strains which Hussein had in his possession were identical to those produced in the US.

So let’s make certain we have this right…the United States sells arms to other countries when it’s expedient for them to do so, and then turns around and criticizes those same countries for actually keeping them. Anyone else see something pathological about this?

Halliburton’s business dealings in Iran helped fund terrorist activities there—including the country’s nuclear enrichment program. It was Dick Cheney who directed Halliburton toward aggressive business dealings with Iran—in violation of U.S. law—in the mid-1990s, which continued through 2005 and is the reason Iran has the capability to enrich weapons-grade uranium.

So if Australia was to go ahead and have these 5 new nuclear stations built we would be looking at nothing more than lining the pockets of people like Bush,Cheney and Rumsfeld who profit so greatly from selling nuclear technology whilst putting Australia's eco system at potentially huge risk whilst at the same time adorning the east coast of Australia with five potential terrorist targets. No doubt there are some very lucrative offers for a place on the Board of Directors for Mr Howard should it all go ahead. Considering the state of superannuation in Australia now I guess he may well need a payment equivalent to that of which Rumsfeld was payed for sitting on the Westinghouse board of USD$190,000 a year. Nice work if you can get it.

I feel that Australia needs to have a full referendum on the signing of any agreements for the contruction of nuclear plants on Australian soil. This needs to take place after a lengthy environmental impact study which hopefully will last long enough to see that Howard, Bush, Rumsfeld and Cheney do not stand to make a cent from their implementation. Any agreements signed by Howard prior to the end of his term as Prime Minister need to be declared null and void until Australians as a whole vote on the issue. Australia has sufficient renewable resources in solar, hydro and wind to far outway any supposed benefits that nuclear power plants would bring us. Howard can no longer stand there and say that he is doing his bit to meet emission standards by trying to get these plants approved as his stance on the Kyoto Treaty shows it to be a bald face lie.

no_nuclear_au

Keep Australia free of nuclear power plants and we will not face the dilemma that Germany is now facing as it tries to scale down and close its existing nuclear plants and dispose of thousands of tons of toxic waste. Don't be a mug punter be a stand up Aussie and nip this farce in the bud before we all end up paying for it and our children's children as well.

Slide Into Summer

After some time away from my Blog I have finally found some time to add a little more. The last couple of months have been given over to friends on tour from Australia, a trip to France and various other events such as the local four day rock festival. After going through the hottest April in history for Germany, our late Spring has turned into a semi monsoonal season with torrential rains and massive electrical thunderstorms brewing regularly.

Had a great weekend down in the Alsace in Colmar and Eguisheim. Everything was excellent albeit for the sore hips from sleeping 2 nights on the ground with only a sleeping bag for padding. Mate, I'm getting old!!!! Next year it will be an air mattress for Jimbo or it will be a hotel. The festival was great this year and the cheeses and wines as usual, simply magic. The weather was also brilliant with 27-28 deg each day. Warm nights too for sitting under the stars and drinking a red. New pics are up on Flickr. Got to mumph some seriously good ham and veal pie as well as the mandatory quiche and pure pork salami for which the region is famous. The Biofestival food is always good and I really pigged out there as well. Also had the best rotisserie chicken I have ever tasted.
Colmar Bio / Eco Fair Colmar Bio / Eco Fair Colmar Bio / Eco Fair

Spent a lot of time sampling and purchasing bio Alsace whites and some lovely reds from France and Italy. The main food hall was a massive affair with a local orchestra and world music bands providing entertainment. They always put on a playground area for the kids as well adults and this year they has an incredible selection of bizarre bicycles in all shapes and forms. Fantastic.

Stopped off on the way back at Strasbourg to view the Notre Dame cathedral ( a true gothic classic) and for contrast we also stopped in Speyer to see the dom (roman era contruction) and the old town. Amazing stuff. God how I love this place. It is always doing my head in from every angle with sights that fill me with wonder.

Strasbourg – Notre Dame Cathedral Strasbourg - Notre Dame Cathedal

Two old mates Bruce and Paula dropped in on their way through Europe for a few nights and we spent some lovely hours visting the local sights which included castles and medieval villages.
Schloß Außerbach Schloß Frankenstein

A couple of very late evenings ensued whilst sampling wines from across Europe and munching an array of cuisine that was in the main German but also included some french cheeses. It was amazingly good to see them both after more than 25 years and it served as a stark reminder of how easy it is to fall out of touch with people and what a loss that can ultimately be. I hope will see each other again before to much time sweeps past again.

Darmstadt annually hosts the Schlossgrabenfest which is a four day concert in the city centre. They put on over 80 bands, on 4 stages and the entry is completely free. The music ranges from rock and pop, to soul, hip hop, alternative, reggae, tribute bands and blues right through to jazz. Several of the acts were very good and some were just downright terrible. However, it was a mix for all tastes and all types. The weather true to form cracked up completely on Saturday night. It is the third year in a row that the festival has been totally awash. I do wish they would try a later date further into Summer. Some of the bands that played were Sweetheart a 70’s Galm tribute band doing T-Rex, Alice Cooper etc. Very entertaining indeed. Hole Full Of Love an AC/DC tribute band was excellent. Really tight covers and the guy palying Angus had all the moves. It really went right off. Sushiduke and Die Happy were also very good. It was the first year that they had introduced any form of security to stop people bringing in their own alcohol supplies. This was a shame as the beer was terrible and served in plastic cups which you had to purchase for one euro. I hope next year they have the common sense to review this as a lot of people complained about the lack of choice in beers and the cheap, tacky cups. Despite all a good was had by all. What's not to like about four day freebies :)

Next month the next wave of Aussie visitors sweeps in from southern Queensland. I am fully expecting yet another bomb crater to appear in the wine rack but as they say,” War is hell, Grace!” My partners sister has her 50th birthday shortly so we are gearing up there for a bit of a bash as well. I will head back to Berlin at the end of the month to stay a couple of nights in The Kempinski Bristol and to see some mates who will marry next week before heading off to live in Hong Kong, where one of them has a contract with the World Wildlife Fund. I have already nick named them ,” Panda Patrol”. Life here is always busy and I am forever finding less and less time available than I require to do all the things that I want to. The need for greed. Summer in Europe …… Bring It On !!!

15.3.07

Into The Spring

It has been an interesting time of late with many different things happening. We have seen a very mild Winter and the last couple of weeks have given us a truly wonderful taste of an early Spring. Temperatures have risen to 19 deg C and even today the sun ws so warm at my office that it begged a little lunch time snooze on the outdoor bench, eyes closed and dreaming of Queensland days. I have met quite a few new people in recent weeks through my local English Club in Darmstadt. Several of them are very interesting with one working for Lufthansa Catering Division and another being a wine maker from Oppenheim.

My friend Laura who has sat beside me for the last 2 years at work has just finished competing in the German version of Popstar. She managed to reach the Top 10. Totally awesome!
Laura Laura From Her DSDS Photoshoot
She did very well indeed given that the starting field was almost 30,000 competitors. Unfortunately the chief moderator for the show was not on her side even though the rest of the judging panel gave her very good reviews. There is no cure biased judges. Truly a shame as she deserved a far better rap than the one Dieter Bohlen gave her. Hopefully the television exposure will give her the boost she needs to find a career somewhere in the music industry. Her rise through the various competition stages resulted in, amongst other things, in me venturing out to a variety of local hotels around Darmstadt to watch her on Saturday nights as she did her thing in Cologne.

It seems to be the year for visitors from Australia. I am expecting 3 in the next 6 weeks and 2 later in the year around September. Fantastic as I have only had 2 lots of visitors from Down Under in the last 6 years. I guess my wine cellar will take a bit of a pounding but this is only to be expected. I had always thought I would see many more visitors living here but the cost of the flights from Australia is truly prohibitive for most people.

I have been very busy getting my pictures from Greece and Barcelona digitised and loaded onto Flickr for friends to see. It has taken many weeks to get it all there but I have the bulk of them up now. Here are some samples.
Parc Güell Monemvasia Porch of the Caryatids

Trips this year should include another run to Berlin and hopefully a return to Prague and possibly onward to Budapest and back through Vienna. A good opportunity exists to head to Italy to stay with a friend but that needs more planning at this point. I have recently won a couple of night in Hotel Du Palais ,Biaritz which was originally Napoleon’s Summer home. That should be really interesting providing the ceilings are higher than 5 feet. Napoleon never liked any thing to be a great deal larger than himself.

So here comes the Summer weather, the bar-b-ques and more of those wonderful German white wines. Hooray!

Into The Spring

It has been an interesting time of late with many different things happening. We have seen a very mild Winter and the last couple of weeks have given us a truly wonderful taste of an early Spring. Temperatures have risen to 19 deg C and even today the sun ws so warm at my office that it begged a little lunch time snooze on the outdoor bench, eyes closed and dreaming of Queensland days. I have met quite a few new people in recent weeks through my local English Club in Darmstadt. Several of them are very interesting with one working for Lufthansa Catering Division and another being a wine maker from Oppenheim.

My friend Laura who has sat beside me for the last 2 years at work has just finished competing in the German version of Popstar. She managed to reach the Top 10. Totally awesome!
Laura Laura From Her DSDS Photoshoot
She did very well indeed given that the starting field was almost 30,000 competitors. Unfortunately the chief moderator for the show was not on her side even though the rest of the judging panel gave her very good reviews. There is no cure for biased judges. Truly a shame as she deserved a far better rap than the one Dieter Bohlen gave her. Hopefully the television exposure will give her the boost she needs to find a career somewhere in the music industry. Her rise through the various competition stages resulted in, amongst other things, in me venturing out to a variety of local hotels around Darmstadt to watch her on Saturday nights as she did her thing in Cologne.

It seems to be the year for visitors from Australia. I am expecting 3 in the next 6 weeks and 2 later in the year around September. Fantastic as I have only had 2 lots of visitors from Down Under in the last 6 years. I guess my wine cellar will take a bit of a pounding but this is only to be expected. I had always thought I would see many more visitors living here but the cost of the flights from Australia is truly prohibitive for most people.

I have been very busy getting my pictures from Greece and Barcelona digitised and loaded onto Flickr for friends to see. It has taken many weeks to get it all there but I have the bulk of them up now. Here are some samples.

Parc Güell Monemvasia Porch of the Caryatids

Trips this year should include another run to Berlin and hopefully a return to Prague and possibly onward to Budapest and back through Vienna. A good opportunity exists to head to Italy to stay with a friend but that needs more planning at this point. I have recently won a couple of night in Hotel Du Palais ,Biaritz which was originally Napoleon’s Summer home. That should be really interesting providing the ceilings are higher than 5 feet. Napoleon never liked any thing to be a great deal larger than himself.

So here comes the Summer weather, the bar-b-ques and more of those wonderful German white wines. Hooray!

19.2.07

Quirky Bits And Bobs

In George Washington's days, there were no cameras. One's image was either sculpted or painted. Some paintings of George Washington showed him standing behind a desk with one arm behind his back while others showed both legs and both arms. Prices charged by painters were not based on how many people were to be painted, but by how many limbs were to be painted. Arms and legs are "limbs," therefore painting them would cost the buyer more. Hence the expression, "Okay, but it'll cost you an arm and a leg."

As incredible as it sounds, men and women took baths only twice a year (May and October)! Women kept their hair covered, while men shaved their heads (because of lice and bugs) and wore wigs. Wealthy men could afford good wigs made from wool. They couldn't wash the wigs, so to clean them they would carve out a loaf of bread, put the wig in the shell, and bake it for 30 minutes. The heat would make the wig big and fluffy, hence the term "big wig." Today we often use the term "here comes the Big Wig" because someone appears to be or is powerful and wealthy.

In the late 1700s, many houses consisted of a large room with only one chair. Commonly, a long wide board folded down from the wall, and was used for dining. The "head of the household" always sat in the chair while everyone else ate sitting on the floor. Occasionally a guest, who was usually a man, would be invited to sit in this chair during a meal. To sit in the chair meant you were important and in charge. They called the one sitting in the chair the "chair man." Today in business, we use the expression or title "Chairman" or "Chairman of the Board."

Personal hygiene left much room for improvement. As a result, many women and men had developed acne scars by adulthood. The women would spread bee's wax over their facial skin to smooth out their complexions. When they were speaking to each other, if a woman began to stare at another woman's face she was told, "mind your own bee's wax." Should the woman smile, the wax would crack, hence the term "crack a smile" In addition, when they sat too close to the fire, the wax would melt . . therefore, the expression "losing face."

Ladies wore corsets, which would lace up in the front. A proper and dignified woman, as in "straight laced". . . wore a tightly tied lace.

Common entertainment included playing cards. However, there was a tax levied when purchasing playing cards but only applicable to the "Ace of Spades." To avoid paying the tax, people would purchase 51 cards instead. Yet, since most games require 52 cards, these people were thought to be stupid or dumb because they weren't "playing with a full deck."

Early politicians required feedback from the public to determine what the people considered important. Since there were no telephones, TV's or radios, the politicians sent their assistants to local taverns, pubs, and bars.They were told to "go sip some ale" and listen to people's conversations and political concerns. Many assistants were dispatched at different times. "You go sip here" and "You go sip there." The two words "go sip" were eventually combined when referring to the local opinion and, thus we have the term "gossip."

At local taverns, pubs, and bars, people drank from pint and quart-sized containers. A bar maid's job was to keep an eye on the customers and keep the drinks coming. She had to pay close attention and remember who was drinking in "pints" and who was drinking in "quarts," hence the term "minding your "P's and Q's."

One more: bet you didn't know this! In the heyday of sailing ships, all war ships and many freighters carried iron cannons. Those cannons fired round iron cannon balls. It was necessary to keep a good supply near the cannon. However, how to prevent them from rolling about the deck? The best storage method devised was a square-based pyramid with one ball on top, resting on four resting on nine, which rested on sixteen. Thus, a supply of 30 cannon balls could be stacked in a small area right next to the cannon. There was only one problem...how to prevent the bottom layer from sliding or rolling from under the others. The solution was a metal plate called a "Monkey"with 16 round indentations. However, if this plate were made of iron, the iron balls would quickly rust to it. The solution to the rusting problem was to make "Brass Monkeys." Few landlubbers realize that brass contracts much more and much faster than iron when chilled. Consequently, when the temperature dropped too far, the brass indentations would shrink so much that the iron cannonballs would come right off the monkey. Thus, it was quite literally, "Cold enough to freeze the balls off a brass monkey." (All this time, you thought that was an improper expression, didn't you.)

16.2.07

Latin, Lillys And Lions

Don’t forget the English language: 65 percent of all words have a Latin origin.

The power and beauty of Latin is best caught in the story of an English botanist in Rome a few Springs ago. On a tour of the Colosseum, the botanist saw a flower he’d never seen in Rome before.

Puzzled, the botanist started to look closely at the other flowers growing out of the flagstones of the old arena (from “harena” – “sand”, i.e. the sand sprinkled in front of the auditorium – “ a place of audience”) and the cracks in the stone seats of the terraces.

The flowers weren’t native to Rome, nor even to Italy. The bemused botanist left the Colosseum to go and look at the patches of grass nearby, under the Arch of Titus, over the Capitoline Hill and in the stadium (a running track). He couldn’t find a trace of these exotic flowers outside the arena at all.

When he took the flowers back to his Cambridge laboratory, he found that they had come from precise, verifiable places: Libya and Tunisia mostly. The only feasible explanation he could come up with was that the flowers had grown from seeds that had lodged in the coats of lions brought from Africa to eat prisoners in the Colosseum 2000 years ago. The seeds must have fallen off as the lions got stuck into some serious fighting with their Christian victims.

I Can Hear A Ring Tail Possum

Well here is my first blog for 2007 and a bit of a mixed bag at that. It has been an extremely busy period. Doing the Christmas bit with a visit to Gries in Saarland. Seeing in the New Year with the ubiquitous champagne and fireworks. Then the dismal flood of work that hits every year in my business throughout January and February as people book their skiing holidays and try to escape the northern Winter by journeying to sunnier climes. Not enough time in a day to Blog that is for sure. So better late than never with a resolve to be more regular in my postings. Bit of a quiet spell today and so here it is.

I was sent a fabulous article the other day which relates to the way in which Australians adopted Aboriginal words for many of the places they named. I have heard a few before but this example was an exceptional unearthing of the early settlers choices.

Would you pay 83 million dollars to live in Weed Lagoon? How about 8.7 million for a block of land in Damn Bandicoot? Or half a million in Woman’s Breast?

No? Well it may be too late! Aboriginal names for popular Melbourne suburbs give fresh insight into land we are all paying big bucks for.

Don’t fancy Weed Lagoon? Well how about its translation Turrack. Yes, Toorak – weed in lagoon or swamp with rushes.

Damn Bandicoot is now Warrandyte and Woman’s Breasts brings new meaning to a weekend escape to Nagambie.

Paul Paton, program manager at the Victorian Aboriginal Corporation for Languages, said most of Melbourne’s place names came from settlers simply plucking unrelated names out of the Kulin language.

This may explain Moorabin, aka Mother’s Milk, and Dandenong, once known as Frostbitten Foot. Maribyrnong residents have the long address of,” I can hear a ringtail possum”.

There are moves a foot to try and get Melbourne’s Aboriginal languages introduced into the education system.
“Excerpts taken from an article by Georgie Pilcher of the Melbourne Age”