The Byron Shire Echo – Issue 38.22 – November 8, 2023

Page 15

North Coast News / Articles Greyhound death at Casino David Lowe casts doubt over or a bloke on a very large pension, former protection scheme prime minister, the

The endless idiocy of Tony Abbott

The racing death of a greyhound at the Casino track has shown that a new scheme to prevent on-track deaths has failed, say animal welfare advocates. According to the Casino stewards’ report for 2 November 2023, in Race 3 Clover Energy collided with another dog at the first turn and suffered a ‘compound fracture on the offside hind leg’. Although the report does not mention death, the injury is classed as Category E, defined as any ‘greyhound that died during a race or was euthanased by the officiating veterinarian due to the catastrophic nature of the injury sustained.’ Clover Energy died six days short of her fourth birthday, had run 37 races, and won $8,040. She was forced to race at both Casino and Ipswich in Queensland. The race video shows Clover Energy running at speed across the finish line. The Coalition for the Protection of Greyhounds (CPG) said the greyhound racing industry’s efforts to stop the surge in racing injuries were failing and a smokescreen for ongoing animal suffering. Greyhound Racing NSW (GRNSW) launched the Greyhound Care Scheme (GCS) 2.0 on 1 July to, in the words of CEO Rob Macaulay, ‘ensure each and every one of our greyhounds get the greatest of care.’ He described it as a ‘significant moment for the industry.’ In the 37-day period from 26 September to 2 November, five dogs have been euthanased at NSW tracks with treatable broken legs So far in 2023, 38 dogs have died racing on NSW tracks. NSW director, CPG, Kylie Field, said Clover Energy is the latest victim of a cruel industry. ‘Greyhound racing is inherently dangerous and tracks can’t be made safe. It now looks like the much-promoted Greyhound Care Scheme 2.0 has already failed. ‘There needs to be an independent review of the scheme. The racing industry is poorly regulated and needs independent oversight.’

F

not-so-honourable Tony Abbott is working very hard for the Institute of Public Affairs (IPA) these days. His latest IPA speech in London was outrageously stupid, playing down the climate crisis even as his own country burns and the international numbers confirm the situation is more dire than ever. Widely reported by Murdoch media, Mr Abbott was speaking at the launch of a document called ‘Energy Security is National Security’, as part of the ironically named Alliance for Responsible Citizenship conference in the UK last week. ‘The climate cult will inevitably be discredited,’ he said. ‘I just hope we don’t have to endure an energy catastrophe before that happens.’ Flying cheerfully in the face of the overwhelming majority of scientific expertise, Mr Abbott claimed warnings about the climate emergency were ‘ahistorical and utterly implausible’, citing as evidence previous climate variations which took place prior to the burning of fossil fuels, such as the Little Ice Age and the Medieval Climate Anomaly. Unfortunately for Abbott’s thesis, and those of us hoping for a liveable future on this planet, research from NASA and others show that these events did not affect the whole globe at once, and were nowhere near as severe as what we’re facing now, with July probably being the hottest month our planet has seen in 100,000 years, and international scientists recently warning that Earth’s life systems were being pushed into ‘dangerous instability’ by human activity.

Don’t come the raw onion with me! Image – Cloudcatcher Media

Cost of living or going extinct? Ignoring all that, Tony Abbott said last week that he believed voters would continue prioritising cost of living and energy price issues over serious action on emissions reduction. Forgetting that time in 2019 when he lost his blue ribbon seat of Warringah to an independent who campaigned heavily for urgent climate action, Abbott said ‘on every occasion in Australia where energy policy and climate policy has been a big election focus, it’s the people who have been on the sceptical end of the spectrum who have done well.’ The issue has certainly kept him in the public eye between media-friendly moments of budgie-smuggling and raw onion eating. In 2009, Tony Abbott described climate change as ‘absolute crap’ and in 2017 he said attempts to do something about emissions were akin to ‘primitive people once killing goats to appease the volcano gods’. The former trainee Jesuit priest remains completely out of step on the

climate issue with his own supposed spiritual leader, Pope Francis. By getting rid of Julia Gillard’s misnamed ‘carbon tax’ while in office, perhaps our last best hope as a nation to do something about the crisis, Mr Abbott set in motion a series of events which led to the current Labor government’s proposal for net zero emissions, now his public enemy number one as he campaigns for more dirty energy. He described the Albanese plan to reach 82 per cent renewables by 2030 as utterly irrational and ‘impossible’, leading Climate Change and Energy Minister Chris Bowen in turn to accuse Abbott and his ilk for being responsible for ‘a decade of catastrophic climate policy’.

Nasty solar As for the IPA report itself, the stupidity just keeps coming. ‘If wind and solar energy are cheap, then they are also nasty,’ claims the author, Professor Stephen Wilson, who is from the School of Mechanical and Mining Engineering at the University of Queensland. Fossil fuels and

Tony Abbott is working hard for the IPA these ĎëƷƆǽ ĎĕōĶưĕſĶŕī şƖƐſëīĕşƖƆōƷ ƆƐƖżĶĎ ƆżĕĕĈIJĕƆ żōëƷĶŕī ĎşƱŕ ƐIJĕ ĈōĶŔëƐĕ ĈſĶƆĶƆ ĕưĕŕ ëƆ IJĶƆ şƱŕ ĈşƖŕƐſƷ ćƖſŕƆȂ nuclear energy are so much nicer, apparently. ‘Contrary to public opinion, the more wind and solar power that is added to a system, the more expensive it becomes to deliver as a service.’ And so it continues. Professor Wilson recently spoke at a forum organised by the Centre for Independent Studies, which is in turn affiliated with the US-based Atlas Network, an organisation with close ties to the tobacco industry, as well as coal and gas producers. For Tony Abbott, up on the IPA podium, it was a case of back to the future, as he lamented Australia’s lost chance under Labor to be a coal, gas and uranium ‘superpower’, even as vast quantities of these substances continue to be dug up. ‘I suppose I’m one of the very few national leaders who have been elected to office promising to end the emissions obsession which has dominated energy policy for the last two decades,’ said Mr Abbott. At least he was honest about negativity being at the core of his political ambition.

Have you checked the weather? Weather can change quickly.

Visit bom.gov.au before and during your day out for regular weather updates.

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mşưĕŔćĕſ ǯǽ ǩǧǩǪ The Byron Shire Echo 15


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