03/10/2017

Former Indian Environment Minister Says Adani's Track Record 'Leaves A Lot To Be Desired'

Fairfax - Tracey Ferrier (AAP)

India's former environment minister says he's appalled by Australia's decision to approve Adani's massive new coal mine in Queensland, and the company's record in environmental management in India "leaves a lot to be desired".
Jairam Ramesh has told the ABC the mine will threaten the survival of the Great Barrier Reef.
Adani Group founder Gautam Adani, pictured with Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull in April. Photo: AAP
"And if it leaves a lot to be desired domestically, there's no reason for me to believe that Adani would be a responsible environmental player globally," he told the broadcaster's Four Corners program.
Mr Ramesh said the federal and Queensland governments had not properly examined Adani Group's environmental and financial conduct in India before approving the mine in the Galilee Basin.
"I'm very, very surprised that the Australian government, for whatever reason, has seen it fit to all along hand-hold Mr Adani; he is not one of the shining stars of environmental stewardship," he said.
That Australia would consider giving concessional loans and other financial breaks to Adani was almost beyond belief given the consequences for climate change, he said.
"You're giving a tax break to a project that is actually going to have adverse environmental consequences, which will have multiplying effects on weather patterns in the region, across the world. I find it bizarre," he said.
"The Great Barrier Reef happens to be in Australia, but it's a common heritage of mankind, it belongs to the world."
Prime Minister Tony Abbott with mining magnate Gautam Adani in Delhi in 2014.  Photo: Andrew Meares
A spokesman for federal Environment and Energy Minister Josh Frydenberg said Adani's new mine would create thousands of jobs.
"State and federal governments have put in place more than 300 strict conditions on the Adani mine," he said.
"The consideration of Adani's environmental history was the most comprehensive ever undertaken under the Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act 1999."
Adani said it operated within the law and defended its environmental record, citing cases before India's Supreme Court.
"Adani Group adhere to the laws of the land in which we operate, be it India or any other of the 50 geographies we work in," the company said in a statement.
"We cannot be held to either ransom or blackmail by media organisations that indulge into sensationalism without any basis and contrary to facts."
AAP has sought comment from the Queensland government.

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Perth's Kwinana Freeway Will Be Permanently Flooded By 2100, Oceanographer Warns

ABC NewsEmily Piesse

The report estimates the freeway will flood at least four times a year by 2050. (ABC TV)
Infrastructure likely to be affected by sea level rise:
  • Kwinana Freeway
  • Riverside Drive
  • Langley Park
  • Old Swan Brewery apartments
  • WACA stadium
  • Gloucester Park
  • Maylands Peninsula Golf Course
Climate data modelling has found key infrastructure near Perth's Swan River, including part of the Kwinana Freeway, is at risk of permanent flooding by 2100 due to rising sea levels.
The study by University of Western Australia masters students examined data from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, and Fremantle tidal gauge records to predict what impact a rising sea level would have on the Swan River until 2150.
Professor of Coastal Oceanography at the UWA Oceans Institute Charitha Pattiaratchi said the most vulnerable areas for flooding were on reclaimed land — including Langley Park, Riverside Drive and Kwinana Freeway in South Perth.
"Most of the low-lying area around the Swan River is all reclaimed land. It didn't exist 100 years ago," Professor Pattiaratchi said.
Professor Pattiaratchi says areas of reclaimed land around the river are most at risk. (ABC News: Ben Tessler)
"If you actually go to the Supreme Court Gardens, there are rings where they used to tie ships."
The report said Fremantle's mean sea level was expected to rise 23 centimetres by 2050, and 83 centimetres by 2150, under a climate change model of medium severity.
However Professor Pattiaratchi said the Swan River water level could rise significantly by 2025, due to a peak in the 18.6-year lunar tidal cycle and the possibility of a La Nina weather system.
He said if the two events occurred simultaneously, the Swan River could rise by as much as 20 centimetres — which is more than the entire water level increase for the past century.
"What we are predicting to happen in 2050 can happen in the next eight years," he said.
The report estimates the Freeway will flood at least four times per year by 2050, with more frequent and severe storm surges exacerbating a steady increase in the mean sea level.
"By 2100, the Freeway will be underwater all the time," Prof Pattiaratchi said.

'We need to be looking at solutions'
Dr Kerry Trayler says Perth needs to look overseas for guidance. (ABC News: Emily Piesse)
Dr Kerry Trayler, who is the principal scientist in the Rivers and Estuaries Division of the Department of Biodiversity, Conservation and Attractions, said more frequent flood events in the Swan River would be caused by two trends.
One of these trends would be increasingly severe summer storms, causing upstream flooding, and the other, estuarine flooding from rising sea levels and storm surges.
"We need to be looking at solutions that are around the world. We're not dealing with this on our own," Dr Trayler said.
"There's a lot of places that are a lot more low-lying than us that are moving a lot more quickly than we are to look at this central problem, so we can learn from them, and I think that the beauty of the UWA report is it brings that into that local setting."
Dr Trayler said mitigation strategies could include retreat — moving key infrastructure away from the shoreline — or retractable walls next to the Freeway.

Main Roads considers rock barriers, river walls
The Swan River frequently sprays northbound traffic on the Kwinana Freeway during storms. (ABC TV)
In a statement, Main Roads said it was aware of the "potential future risks" posed by a rising sea level on the Como section of Kwinana Freeway and other road infrastructure.
The agency said a number of options were being considered as part of the Kwinana Freeway Foreshore and Infrastructure Protection Strategy, which covers the area from Mt Henry Bridge to Narrows Bridge.
The options include beach renourishment, rock barriers and river walls.
The UWA report proposes a much more significant investment — a storm surge barrage located at Fremantle Rail Bridge or Blackwall Reach — at a cost of between $185 million and $493 million.
The authors estimate the cost of the barrage would be recovered by 2030, and it would likely be closed 38 times a year to prevent flooding by 2050.
Professor Pattiaratchi said the storm surge barrier could be part of a broader discussion about mitigating flood risks.
"Are we just going to say, we'll just do some mitigations so that the Freeway is open, but some other areas will get flooded?," he said.
"It's a whole lot of policy decision-making which needs to be taken into account before you actually go to build a barrage."

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In A Warming World, Keeping The Planes Running

New York Times - Mike Ives

HONG KONG — Airports are a major global business, part of an industry that by one estimate transports the equivalent of nearly half the world’s population in a single year.
But the world’s airports were largely designed for an older era — a cooler one.
Illustration Andrew Roberts


Many were built near seacoasts or river deltas to minimize disturbances to humans or avoid natural obstacles like mountains. Others have short runways because of space restrictions, while planners in the past gave little thought to how extreme temperatures could affect airplanes and airports.
Climate change is making airport planners think again.
Low-lying airports may become increasingly vulnerable to storm surges. Hotter temperatures may cause tarmac to melt, restrict takeoff weights or require heavier aircraft to take off later in the day.
Now governments, companies and experts around the world are grappling with what could be a very expensive problem. Keeping the industry aloft requires colossal investment — $1.1 trillion in airport infrastructure projects are planned or underway, the CAPA Center for Aviation, a consulting firm based in Australia, said in July.
“Airports understand well that climate change could have some far-reaching effects and that they are not immune to them,” said Angela Gittens, the director general at Airports Council International’s headquarters in Montreal.

Rising Waters
Climate scientists predict that sea levels could rise by as much as six or seven feet this century, and aviation experts say that even a much smaller rise could lead to more flooding at runways or terminals.
Preliminary studies indicate that dozens of airports are at risk. A 2009 report by Eurocontrol, a Brussels-based agency that coordinates air traffic management across Europe, estimated that more than 30 major European airports sat on coastlines or within river floodplains.
Some airports are already taking such warnings to heart.
In Hong Kong, officials say that a project to build a third airport runway on soon-to-be reclaimed land was influenced by climate and sea-level projections made in 2014 by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. They say the $18 billion runway will have a sea wall that stands at least 21 feet above the waterline and can withstand 100-year storms, as well as a drainage system that is designed to handle rare floods.
In Norway, about 20 of the country’s 45 state-run airports are “quite exposed” to potential sea level rise, said Olav Mosvold Larsen, a climate change adviser at Avinor, the state-run airport operator. Avinor has decided to build all future runways at least 23 feet above sea level.
Sea level rise and storm surges have a “somewhat-nearer-term flavor” for airports than other climate-related risks, such as rising temperatures, said Terence R. Thompson, a senior fellow at the Logistics Management Institute in Virginia who studies links between aviation and climate change.
“You’ve got this complex, multisegment industrial site, and it’s not just ‘Does the runway go underwater?’” he said. For example, the flooding of a taxiway could force pilots to take longer taxi routes from terminals to runways, causing delays at one airport that ripple across many others, he said.

Hot Runways
Climate scientists predict a global increase this century in the annual number of hot days and heat waves, and some airport planners worry that climate change could push airport infrastructure to the limits of its operating capacity.
Runways in northern Canada have already been damaged by thawing permafrost, for example, leading officials to commission permafrost studies ahead of a recent $240 million renovation of Iqaluit International Airport in the Canadian Arctic.
Concrete runway slabs at other airports may buckle from extreme heat, as similar slabs occasionally do on highways, and there is “serious concern” that asphalt on aprons and parking areas could melt, said Herbert PĆ¼mpel, a co-chairman of the World Meteorological Organization’s Expert Team on Aviation, Science and Climate.
Then there are concerns about aircraft.
A plane’s maximum operating temperature depends on a variety of factors, including airport elevation. But as temperatures climb far above 100 degrees Fahrenheit, airlines can begin suspending operations for certain types of planes, as American Airlines did in June when daytime highs in Phoenix climbed to about 120 degrees.
Captain Rajeev Bajpai, Air India’s general manager of operations for the country’s western region, said that extreme heat was already an aviation problem in notoriously hot countries like Kuwait, where planes can be grounded on summer days because their electronics automatically shut down.
“You can’t even get the flight going in the sense that you can’t even prepare the cockpit,” he said.

Longer Runways
Illustration Andrew Roberts
Hot temperatures cause air density to decrease, reducing lift and forcing airlines to either reduce weight on flights or move departures to cooler hours of the day. Experts say that will most likely pose a long-term economic challenge for airports, especially ones with humid climates, high altitudes or short runways.
The cost of having a short runway in a hot place became clear to planners at Brisbane Airport in Australia, who studied climate models and airlines’ financial data in 2009 while designing the airport’s second runway, said Karyn Rains, the project’s former environment manager.
They discovered that because of an expected spike in the number of annual 86-plus-degree days in Brisbane, airlines would be forced to spend more than $79 million per year by 2035 if the second runway were 8,202 feet, rather than 10,826 feet. Ms. Rains said that was mostly because larger planes would be unable to land at an 8,202-foot runway under certain hot weather conditions, and would need to burn extra fuel while waiting to land at the privately owned airport’s original, 11,811-foot runway.
In that sense, Ms. Rains said, spending $53.5 million for an extra 2,624 feet of tarmac, or 7.8 percent of the second runway’s total estimated cost, made good business sense. “You ignore climate change impacts at your peril, really,” she said.

Lighter Loads
A study earlier this year in the journal Climatic Change, based on modeling for 19 major airports, found that 10 percent to 30 percent of annual flights departing at the hottest time of the day may require weight restrictions by the middle or end of this century.
The reductions would be small, perhaps 4 percent or less on average, the study said. But a reduction of even one-half of a percent could mean, for example, that an airline had to trim 722 pounds, or about three passengers, from a 160-passenger flight on a Boeing 737-800, possibly imposing a substantial economic burden over time.
“It’s not a catastrophic thing that’s going to cause great disruption, but it imposes a cost on the whole aviation system,” said Ethan D. Coffel, the study’s lead author and a doctoral student at Columbia University. He said that the Middle East may be hardest hit because it has the world’s hottest weather and a high percentage of long-haul flights, which often take off near maximum weight capacity.
But weight restrictions could soon become more common in countries with temperate climates as well, experts said, and airports with short runways may find themselves at a competitive disadvantage.

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