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Carbon Accounting Day 3

February 9, 2009 @ 21:21 By Gavin Webber 2 Comments

Today was the last day of classroom time for the Carbon Accounting course that I have been attending at Swinburne Uni.  It was a very interesting day, and each class member gave a presentation about the inventory that they are developing.  There was a broad spectrum of entities that were represented. From Offshore Oil recovery projects in Bass Strait, a major passenger rail operator in Melbourne, a soap manufacturing company, a home renovation project, a hydro dam tunnel project, and the ATA (my inventory) to name a few.
Some were huge carbon inventories, and unlike myself some of my classmates were able to work on their inventory during working hours as they were compiling it for the company they were employed by.  And they needed to, because the huge amount of data would have taken someone doing it part time a very long time indeed.  Well done everyone, they were great presentations!
After the student presentations, we were given a professional presentation about Cascade Green beer from Natasha from Net Balance.  It was about the Life Cycle Assessment (LCA) that she and others had to perform on the product so it could be branded as Greenhouse Friendly.  The entire process took six months of hard work to complete this LCA for Fosters Group so they could buy the appropriate carbon offsets to be able to claim that the beer was carbon neutral.  I still prefer home brew, far less emissions, and it tastes better as well!
After lunch we had a presentation from Peter from Ark Climate about how the National Electricity grid worked from a physical and financial perspective.  It was extremely eye opening, but I won’t go into the details here.  Suffice to say that when I sold the Renewable Energy Certificates that I created upon installation of my Solar PV system in 2007, that was a very bad thing.  The reason being is that I cannot claim the carbon benefit of the green power generated by my system.  I sold that right to someone else when I sold the REC’s.  I have a few choices to be able to make that claim again.  I can buy back the REC’s at the market price, or buy the equivalent in CO2-e offsets.  I figure that either way, I will be out of pocket to the tune of about $1200.  I wish I had have known about this a little bit earlier, then I wouldn’t have sold them.
We then got given our homework to complete off the course.  We have to develop a 1200 word Carbon Inventory report complete with analysis, graphs, and recommendations for the company whose inventory we are compiling.  I think it will take me a little while to whip up, because I am still trying to dig up a few more figures from the ATA to complete their inventory.  That should keep me busy for the next two weeks.
Other than that, Richard our instructor gave the blog a plug, so if any of my fellow class mate are reading, thanks for dropping by!  It was a pleasure meeting all of you.
All in all, a very worthwhile course if you are interested in this sort of field.  I am, as you can tell, and would love to do this as part of a sustainable career.  So if anyone has a role for me, don’t hesitate to drop me a line via email!  I am passionate about making a difference.
Oh, one last thing.  Yesterday I said that I would end up being an accredited carbon accountant.  I miss led you and myself.  Richard helped clear it up for me.  The course is accredited but the students are not.  Here is the reason why, straight from the Governments White paper on the Carbon Pollution Reduction Scheme.
“7.5.2 Auditor expertise and qualifications
In addition to developing relevant guidelines, the Government’s preference in the Green Paper was to establish an accreditation system for auditors, the form and nature of which would be determined following further consultation with the industry.”
P 7-36 Vol 1 White Paper
So maybe when the government gets its act together, my fellow class mates and I will receive some sort of recognition for passing the course and increase our chances of employment.  Here is hoping it will be quite soon, because I reckon that business will begin pick up in this sector very quickly over the next year.

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Filed Under: Carbon Accounting, carbon footprint, Carbon Pollution Reduction Scheme, climate change, renewable energy

How Ironic!

February 1, 2009 @ 21:34 By Gavin Webber 9 Comments

Picture this.  Friday 30th January 2009.  Eighteen determined students studying Carbon Accounting, working in a classroom full of computers, figuring out how to calculate carbon inventories for Australian businesses.  No air conditioning, stinking hot and sweaty, with an inside temperature of 32C and an outside temperature of 45C.   The third day in a row of maximum temperatures of over 43C. 

Doesn’t that strike you as being just a little bit ironic?  It did for me.  I felt like I was trying to shut the gate after the horse had already bolted.  Learning how to calculate carbon by the tonne so that households and businesses could reduce their carbon footprints.  Maybe we have left our efforts a little too late?  This heatwave is just another little part of the evidence that our climate in our part of the planet is changing quickly.  11 out of the last 12 years have been the hottest on record. 

Here is the rub.  Over the last three days of searing temps, the following things failed. 

  • Public Transport
  • The Power grid

These major events happened as well. 

  • Bushfires in Gippsland (East Victoria)
  • Water consumption skyrocketed
  • Road traffic increased 10 fold (due to failed Public Transport)
  • The wine industry lost 90% of the 2009 grape crop
  • 0.8mm of rain for the month of January (lowest on record)

Now, these events are not ironic in themselves, they were just outcomes of a major heatwave, one that the greater Melbourne area has never experienced since weather records began in 1880.  The ironic thing was the majority of peoples behaviour once the heatwave finished yesterday.  The TV news was full of people angry at the government, public transport operators, and power companies.

So lets analyse this anger and see if it is miss-directed.  The first question to ask is what causes climate change?  Is the government?  Well maybe a little, because they emit CO2-e like everyone else, but not the sole contributor of climate change.  The ones at fault are everyone who leads a western lifestyle!  That would be the majority of Australians.  So don’t you think that the angry people should have a good look at themselves first. 

Secondly, you can’t blame the public transport operators for the massive cancellations, basically because the suburban rail system was not designed to operate at temperatures over 40C.  Our average January temperature is usually 26C.  Railway tracks buckle at these extremes, and they did, which caused massive delays.  Brakes on engines aren’t designed to work in sweltering heat, and they didn’t.  Electric trains don’t run when there is no electricity, and neither do the signals for diesel locos either.  So what did most people do on day 2 and 3 of the heatwave?  They drove their cars to work.  Do you think anyone carpooled?  Hell no.  Not even I, because no one I knew was going my way, so I was also to blame for the larger than usual traffic congestion.  It took me two hours to get to Uni on Friday, when it normally take just 50 minutes.

Thirdly, you also can’t blame the government for the power grid failing.  Yes, the Premier of Victoria, the Honourable Mr Brumby might have said on Monday that the grid will be able to handle a few days of hot weather, but it was not his fault that every Tom, Dick, and Harry decided to turn their air conditioners on pushing the grid to breaking point, instead of investing in insulation, awnings and ceiling fans to keep their homes cool.  And break it did.  At about 1800 on Friday afternoon a major substation blew up at South Morang that supplied to major transmission lines to the western part of the state.  Over half a million consumers were without power for at least four hours at the height of the heat. 

Do you think this anger was misdirected.  I do!  Everyone has a choice, and most seam to be making the wrong ones.

So what about solutions.  Well here is one that would solve most of the issues.

Just think of this scenario which is definitely and squarely in the governments court.  A 1 kW Solar PV system of every homes roof top, generating at least 25% of each homes electricity need.   This electricity will be generated where it is needed most, and not via distributed via substations and transmission lines.  Maybe if all this locally generated power was being pumped into the local grid, substations wouldn’t overheat and explode from overuse.  I don’t know, I may be out on a limb here, but if feed-in tariff was just a little more (a lot more) attractive to the average householder, then this scenario could become a reality.  This scenario would also go a long way to helping reduce our greenhouse gas emissions, by offsetting our reliance on brown coal fired electricity generation.  We might also go quite a way to setting an example to others and could avert the climate chaos that is quickly approaching us.

To cap all of this off, the rainfall that we so desperately need is nowhere in sight.  My rainwater tank is nearly dry, and the vegetable patch is a former shadow of itself.  During the heat I lost 5 tomato plants, hundreds of sun-burnt tomatoes on other vines, two cucumber plants, 6 sweetcorn plants, and most of a hedge out the front.  Amazingly, or more to my hard work, the rest of the garden survived.  I can certainly believe that our water supply for the city is getting near to critical.  Not as bad as no 2009 vintage from the majority of Victorian vineyards!  Now that is a sorry state of affairs!

I truly hope that Melbourne does not become the first major Australian city to run out of drinking water.  Now that would be one for the books.  What would happen to the angry people then?  Who would they blame?  Where would they go? 

Possibly a behaviour or reality check is in order.  There are lessons to be learnt from the events of this past week.  But, alas, these are lessons that will not sink in, and the opportunity will most probably pass us by.  The hot weather will be a distant memory, now that it is becoming cooler, and the necessary solutions will not be implemented.  Consumption in all things crappy will not abate.  We will wait until it happens again next summer and complain until it this weather pattern is the norm.  And of course our parliamentary ostriches, with their heads in the sand, will continue to fight for the status quo.  Corporate greed before morality.  Sounds the wrong way around to me!

I will leave you with a quote that always gives me hope when I read it.  I hope it does for you as well.

"Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world; indeed, it is the only thing that ever has." – Margaret Mead.

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Filed Under: An Inconvenient Truth, Carbon Accounting, climate change, renewable energy, Transport, vegetables, water

Meltin’ in Melton

January 29, 2009 @ 23:03 By Gavin Webber 4 Comments

I just saw the ice cream van go past my house and look what happened! 
All I wanted was a box of ice creams for the kids!  It has been 43C for two day in a row, and it is forecast for a similar temperature tomorrow.  I wish this heat was over, but we will just have to do our best.  I have been watering the veggie patch every morning at 0530 with mains water when I am allowed and tank water every other day.  The tank is now 25% full, and as it hasn’t rained since 10th December 2008, I reckon it will hit rock bottom before it gets any better.  Kim has been spraying the chooks to make sure they stay cool every couple of hours, and they are doing well.  Well done love!
This morning I had to pick 3 cucumbers as they were starting to get sunburned.  This evening, I picked about 4 kg of blood plums and put them in the fridge.  The plums that are exposed to the direct sun are burnt, and only good for chook food now.  Luckily there are so many more sheltered from the sun under the canopy.  I also picked about 3 kg of tomatoes tonight, and put them in the fridge.  There are quite a few that have been burnt as well, but not enough to cry about.  When it cools down a little I will make some pasta sauce to preserve for later on in the year.  I even have my eye on a tomato jam recipe.
Tomorrow, I go back to class again and attend day 2 of my carbon accounting course at Swinburne Uni.  I finished the project plan on time and submitted it on Australia Day, so I am hoping that it was OK.  We learn about how to put a carbon inventory together in Excel and how to calculate the CO2-e emissions for different things like municipal waste, burning petrol in cars, natural gas etc.  Should be fun, and I will write up a quick post about it tomorrow night.
To finish of, a bit of education in the form of the latest ZapRoot video.  It features a nudie Kate Winslet and how she was tricked into posing with fur.  Makes the mind boggle, but PETA were very upset about it!  Don’t mind the picture below, there is no real nudity in the story.  There is also a very good little feature about Ocean Acidification and how rising CO2 is killing our reefs and ocean creatures.  

Enjoy!

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Filed Under: Carbon Accounting, climate change, vegetables, water

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About Gavin Webber

About Gavin Webber

An Ordinary Australian Man Who Has A Green Epiphany Whilst Watching A Documentary, Gets a Hybrid Car, Plants A Large Organic Vegetable Garden, Goes Totally Solar, Lowers Consumption, Feeds Composts Bins and Worms, Harvests Rainwater, Raises Chickens, Makes Cheese and Soap, and Eats Locally. All In The Effort To Reduce Our Family's Carbon Footprint So We Can Start Making A Difference For Our Children & Future Generations To Come.

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