Mencius on property

January 21, 2020

When Mencius, was visiting King Hwuy of Lëang, the King went and stood with him by a pond.

Looking around on the wild geese and deer, large and small, the King said, “Do wise and good princes take pleasure in these things?”

Mencius replied, “Being wise and virtuous, they have pleasure in these things. If they are not wise and virtuous, although they have these things, they do not find pleasure in them.”

Mencius continued: “King Wan had a park like this, which was for himself and the people. He used the strength of the people to make his tower and pond, and the people rejoiced to do the work, calling the tower ‘the Marvellous Tower,’ and the pond ‘the Marvellous Pond,’ and were glad that he had his deer, his fishes and turtles.

“He had his tower, the pond, birds and animals, but how could he have pleasure alone? The ancients caused their people to have pleasure as well as themselves, and therefore they could enjoy what they had.

Mencius encounters a President

January 21, 2020

The opening chapter of Mencius reworked slightly….

Mencius went to see President Trump, of the Kingdom of the USA. The President said, “I’ve never heard of you. I guess you’ve come a long way to listen to me, like all the best people do. But my advisors tell me you are a smart guy, perhaps you have something to say about how I can profit my kingdom and business?”

Mencius replied, “Why must your Greatness use that word ‘profit’? If your Greatness asks, ‘What is to be done to profit my kingdom, or profit my business?’ then the great CEOs and Ministers will say, ‘What is to be done to profit our families, and our business?’ and the lesser executives and the common people will say, ‘What is to be done to profit our persons?’
“Everyone will try to make the profit out of each other, and the kingdom, or the business, will be endangered.
“If righteousness be put last and profit first, people will not be satisfied without snatching everything they can. It makes a war of all against all.
“Let your Greatness make benevolence and righteousness your only themes—Why must you speak of profit?”

The Great President replied: “You must be a fucking socialist. Completely impractical. Get out. Who brought this idiot?”

A brief comment on the US Democratic primaries

January 19, 2020

People seem to be noticing that Bernie Sanders is either getting a hard time in the media, or he seems to be being ignored, even in the supposedly left media.

This illustrates the proposition that there is no mainstream left-wing media in the US, whatever Fox and its friends declare. To reiterate a point: all mainstream US media is corporately owned, and depends on corporate advertising. It is necessarily corporately controlled and will rarely challenge the interests of its owners and sponsors.

If people can recognise there is no left wing media, then it becomes obvious the media will not treat Mr Sanders well. After all, they could not even bring themselves, in general, to treat Hilary Clinton particularly well, and they participated gleefully in spreading and repeating Republican slurs against her for thirty years. And Hilary Clinton was only a moderate threat to corporate power.

This hostility is nothing to do with the Democrat establishment. It is a fact of life over which they have no control.

From their point of view, the media hostility towards Sanders would become part of his campaign. The hostility is such that Democrats could well decide that it is not worth the risk, unless they were shown otherwise by massive voting for Sanders, and a massive grass roots campaign. People tell me he has the latter, but it may not be enough to get votes from Democrats in the primaries – we do not know yet.

While it seems probable that the media would be hostile and dismissive if Sanders won the nomination – we can guarantee that if he does not get the nomination, the media sphere will be full of stories about how he was betrayed, not by the media (which will not be mentioned), but by the Democrat establishment, so as to try and convince left-inclined people to vote for a third party candidate and put Trump back in, who will then continue his moves to destroy the ecology, destroy health care, destroy protest, destroy the constitution, make money for himself, and have a war.

On the other side, if Sanders wins the Presidency, then the hostile media may have given Sanders useful experience for dealing with a hostile congress and Senate, when the Reps get voted back in.

Problems for oil finance

January 19, 2020

If correct, this is an extraordinary piece of financial news, that deserves maximum publicity.

The Institute for Energy Economics and Financial Analysis reports that:

“ExxonMobil, BP, Chevron, Total, and Royal Dutch Shell (Shell), the five largest publicly traded oil and gas firms, collectively rewarded stockholders with $536 billion in dividends and share buybacks since 2010, while generating $329 billion in free cash flow over the same period.”

This means that

“Since 2010, the world’s largest oil and gas companies have failed to generate enough cash from their primary business – selling oil, gas, refined products and petrochemicals – to cover the payments they have made to their shareholders.”

Pouring money into shareholders is not an obvious investment in future business other than in perhaps suggesting you are a good investment, and trying to increase the share prices, which are often tied to bonuses.

“Asset sales have been a crucial source of funding of dividends and share buybacks for the supermajors.”

This is not using asset sales to make new investments, or carry out new explorations or research into technology or new business ventures – this is odd.

We should also note that oil companies do not pay the tax they should, which also makes them precarious if governments were to insist that they should.

Again from the IEEFA

Australian company Telstra paid twenty times as much tax as all of the oil and gas companies in Australia despite having similar revenues according to the latest data provided by the Australian Taxation Office (ATO).

Companies working in Australia’s oil and gas industry paid just $81 million in tax in 2016-17, while Telstra with a comparative revenue of $26,948 million paid $1,644 million in tax.

“Catherine Tanner, the Chief Executive Officer of BG Group promised around $1 billion a year in taxes and $300 million a year in royalties for its petroleum project in Queensland,” says Robertson.

“The reality is BG Group paid no tax in 2016-17 nor did its parent Shell Australia

IEEFA notes $195 billion of Australia’s natural wealth is being exported with $0.00 royalties or royalty-type petroleum resource rent taxes (PRRT) being collected.

One way of interpreting both pieces of news together, is that oil company executives think they are heading for trouble, and they want to shovel as much money to their established shareholders (including high level executives) as they can, possibly out of defrauding tax-payers, before they collapse.

Problems for Renewables: Apparent costs and ‘lock-in’.

January 18, 2020

Costs of building new renewable energy systems, are difficult to estimate accurately, as are the costs for fossil fuel and nuclear energy generation.

One of the problems of capitalism is that it functions through hype, exaggeration, advertising, PR and so on. The fight over information is part of the fight over sales and subsidies. Subsidies are frequently ignored as part of the costs, or claimed not to be costs, in order to make products look cheaper, or to keep the subsidies from people’s objection. People can also exagerate benefits of particular innovations, or promised innovations, to get research funding or for commerical purposes. This activity makes it more likely for people to hold off purchase, until a product is ready for market, or to purchase an existing product. Few decisions in this arena can be entirely rational, or based on guaranteed useful data.

This is to be expected. While communication is not possible without the possibility of deception, social systems can increase that probability or, possibly, diminish it. We have a problematic system. People have political and economic reasons to misrepresent all kinds of ‘facts’. In our system fake news about almost everything is absolutely normal – especially if the fakery is already established, or supports established power and energy relations. Consequently it is hard to get accurate figures on anything to do with sales of large projects.

We can only look at appearances, and these seem reasonably clear.

In Australia coal mines often depend on taxpayer subsidy. We build rail lines, roads, and offer them free or cheap water at the expense of farmers and towns. We don’t insist upon them rehabilitating the mines; just a few trees around the mine edge, to obscure the views of passers-by, might be enough, if even that much gets done. We don’t require there to be any expenditure to clean up the ongoing pollution they issue. They can destroy our water table and water supply and that is just considered bad luck.

The jobs provided by coal mines are minimal. Adani has a royalty holiday, and Barnaby Joyce even wanted taxpayers to give Adani 1 billion dollars for more or less nothing in return except loss of water from the water gift. As it happens, the IEEFA estimate that Adani is already “set to receive over $4.4 billion of tax exemptions, deferrals and capital subsidies from Australian taxpayers,” assuming a 30 year life for the mine.

In effect, with coal, we seem to pay people to take our minerals and destroy our environment. At the least they get a lot of earnings which are tax free.

Similar events seem true of coal based energy. Burning coal not only produces climate change but it also poisons people and ecologies. I guess we have been using coal for so long that we don’t recognise the dangers. As well, coal gets government support for it to be locked-in. In the US Trump is apparently trying to cut pollution standards to make coal more economic. Death and illness is of no concern.

In Australia, we also face the problem that most coal generation is nearing the end of its life, by 2030 55% of coal fired energy stations will be over 40 years old, and heading into unreliability. We need to build replacement sources of energy, or we will face large-scale shortages of energy. This is simply fact.

Renewables are now said to be, generally, either competitive with coal or cheaper than coal, although there is debate [1], [2], [3], [4].

In Australia, it’s obvious they are more than competitive, because the government has to keep talking about taxpayer subsidy for new coal energy, or talking about forcing people to keep old coal fired energy stations going. No one wants to build coal energy stations on their own bat. The government also appears to have guaranteed to purchase electricity from Gas, to get it going. On the other hand, heaps of companies in Australia seem to want to build renewable farms, and this is despite considerable regulatory inhibition and ambiguity. (The same appears true in the US where, according to Bloomberg, “a total of $55.5 billion were spent in the sector last year, an increase of 28%”, which is apparently a record). In Australia one of our main problems with renewables seems to be government regulation, the political power of the coal mining industry, and ongoing tax concessions and subsidies for coal. Some this regulation is left over from the kind of regulation which helped centralised coal development, and now promotes coal lock-in and hinders coal-exit.

If we balanced the competition by removing the hostile regulation and subsidies for dirty energy, it would probably help renewable growth.

Whatever the case might be here, countries which sell coal seem to be offering subsidies to third world countries to get them locked into coal based energy production, and slow down any renewable transformation. If places never use much coal, then they may not miss it. This is economic power attempting to structure the energy market to give it continuing markets and profits without having to change. Coal companies are fighting for their profits and that involves politics as part of their market action. We should assume that coal producers act similarly in Australia.

Another problem is that network costs are important. It is frequently objected that renewables require new grids and this is costly. A problem we face in Australia is private ownership of the grid by companies who are reluctant to invest in getting the grid to places where the renewable energy, which competes with their energy supply, can be built. This is a lock-in produced by ownership. Ownership also gives power to influence markets.

Existing fossil fuel generation has a legacy of networks which were largely paid for by the taxpayers and then sold on. This should diminish coal costs, and produce lock-in to energy generation at particular locations. However, given that coal energy stations are not being rebuilt or renewed, it does not seem to.

Other forms of energy have the same network problems, but they seem to be ignored. Every time a new gasfield comes online, pipelines have to be developed, and that does not seem a problem to those objecting to networks for new renewable sites.

If governments took climate change seriously, then building new powerlines in consultation with the industry, would probably be the way to go. It would be costly, but still less costly than doing nothing, and could probably be helped to be paid for by removal of subsidies for fossil fuels.

Storage is also a cost issue, but in some places you have to include storage as part of the development, so (in those cases) it is fixed in. Also if we spent more money on R&D we might develop simple cheap solutions (we might not, but we are more likely to). The Scotts are apparently using heavy weights suspended in deep pits. [see also] This works like pumped hydro without the need for water – which would be a bonus in Australia.

Another objection to renewables, in terms of cost, is that they are intermittant, so we have to overproduce to get a stable supply. But if we do over-produce, this is not necessarily a problem. Over production is useful as, for example, when excess power can be directed into making hydrogen as a portable back up fuel, and shut down when heavy demand returns.

People are still arguing that nuclear energy is cheap and effective, but often do not include the expenses of decommission in that cost. But as I have argued before, with nukes, the big trouble is that no-one in the West seems to want to build nuclear, because it is not economical, and most of the nuke companies have gone out of business, or gone out of the business.

The UK government had to guarantee massive electricity prices and taxpayer funded indemnity at Hinkley Point, because no one would insure it. It’s also running massively over budget.

While I could be wrong, I am not aware of anyone prepared to build fossil fuel or nuclear energy supplies, in Australia, without massive subsidy, guaranteed prices (as with the gas energy mentioned above) or even subsidy and diminishment of safety requirements. This indicates to me, that both of these sources are less economic than they once were, and this is before you add in the costs of the ecological destruction or climate change they generate. In practice Renewables are ready to go, especially with a little network planning, or admission that the market does not solve every urgent problem in the right amount of time.

Ultimately we cannot absolutely expect the kinds of service we have now. If we keep on with fossil fuels, and ecological destruction the situation is likely to become untenable – we are already destroying the Earth’s carrying capacity. We have to shift to another source of power. Nuclear does not seem viable. That leaves renewables, which are not yet built in anything like the required amounts, and which may not be continuous, although they can be made close to continuous.

Only thirty or forty or so years ago, power black outs were quite common in Australia, and we managed to live with them. So we can probably manage to live with them now.

Environmental ecology is an important part of the social and economic process. The environment currently keeps us going without much human input. If we keep destroying it through pollution, then it cannot. Everything depends on everything else. We have to either repair the environment, which costs, or make an artificial envionment which probably costs more.

So at all levels, controlled low-pollution production of renewables, seems like a reasonable solution, one that is actually favoured by markets as well as by environmental concern.

Climate paranoia, or the real reality?

January 17, 2020

I have just received an email, that tells me that

“Vatican Societas Iesu and Secular Illuminati controlled City of London, People’s Republic of China, United Nations and Obama led US Senior Executive Service Satanic Occultist SOCIALISTS have initiated WAR AGAINST the population and land of AUSTRALIA”

Yes this is through the bushfires and through generating climate change….

You will notice that everyone evil is a Socialist, a Catholic, a financier, Chinese, black, or Satanist. Goes without saying – but they are really Socialists. This perhaps means the Protestant Right now hates everyone. I wonder if the use of the City of London, is a deflection from Wall Street; so that the financial evil in the world is British, not American? or just an expression of all those US movies in which the villain has a British accent (if they don’t have a Russian or Arabic accent). Have these supposed truth seekers been BOUGHT OUT by US finance?

That the US has a Senior Executive Service Satanic Occultist explains a lot. That must be how Trump got in.

“Drought has been engineered through criminally unconstitutional ‘water harvesting’ privatisation of natural water resources.”

This is possibly correct, and privatisation of water has affected rivers severely. Always good to start with something plausible, but this is soon left behind.

“criminally irresponsible neglect of ‘controlled burn’ forestry management”

Ok that’s from Mr Murdoch and the Coalition, and about as wrong as it gets. the controlled burning did not have much effect, even though the rural fire service in NSW supposedly exceeded their targets. Of course things can always be done better. But 17m Hectares is a lot of burning.

If you want a conspiracy about lack of prevention then you could ask what has happened to Peter Dutton who is head of Emergency Management Australia. EMA is supposed to aim at building “a disaster resilient Australia that prevents, prepares, responds and recovers from disasters and emergencies.” It appears Dutton and his department were warned, after the election, of “more frequent and severe heatwaves, bushfires, floods, and cyclones. These will increasingly occur concurrently.” However, he did nothing, and has disappeared during the fires, leaving Scott Morrison to take the heat and the blame.

Anyway, apart from real politics, we have:

“Stratospheric aerosol injection of aluminum and barium fire accelerants.”

Ingenious.

“Amplified by Ionospheric Microwave Heater Array weaponry”

How good is that?

“The enormous fire disaster in Australia has nothing to do with anthropogenic carbon dioxide emissions ‘climate change’, let alone Australia’s anthropogenic carbon dioxide emissions” [This idea of climate change is promoted by] “celebrity prostitutes and Socialist activists delusionally insist in fervent mass murder”

There you are, trying to stop people destructively changing the earth systems is now to be classed as mass murder.

And this fire disaster represents a political take over by such people as:

“Extinction Rebellion, School Strike 4 Climate and the National Union of Students.”

Yay!!!! But these evil students want

“total conversion to SolarCity and SpaceX/StarLink/NeuroLink ‘Smart Grid’ Neural Implant Integrated ‘Internet of Things’ Electronic Enslavery & Eugenics Extermination 5G ACTIVE DENIAL Microwave Radiation Weapons of Mass Destruction.”

Whatever that is.

Insects are being exterminated via

“MASSIVE MICROWAVE OVEN WEAPON OF MASS EXTERMINATION VIA CARCINOGENIC CIRCUITS & CYBERNETICS”

I guess this is more obvious than insects are dying because of genetic modification of crops, massive use of insecticides or changing ecologies.

“5G Ghz Prelude to 6G Thz Plague
UN Agenda 2030 ‘666’ Terra Hurts ‘Lake of Fire'”

I like Terra Hurts…. and the 666 frequency. But again I understand many people are disturbed by 5G, so we might as well add that to the mix.

“Kevin Rudd & Julia Gillard’s massive donations to Clinton Foundation Pay-to-Play Child Sex & Cannibalism corruption, blackmail and extortion linked to Cardinal Pell”

In case you didn’t know, the first part of this is standard right wing noise. There is precious little evidence presented, but then the Clinton Foundation is not the Trump foundation, which seemed to indicate its charitable object in its name. Anyway, we all know Hillary is crooked, so this just adds to the weight of socialist, Satanist, English, Chinese, Vatican crooks. They all have something in common. We don’t like them.

China is bad, it is growing emissions… but

The rabid, deluded and democidal POLITICAL “climate change” drones refuse to ever direct their efforts against the PRC:

That could be because many of them don’t actually vote in the PRC, or speak Chinese, and they have no political influence there. But plenty of people do criticize China and India, although both countries are expanding their renewables at a considerable rate.

“ACHTUNG ! Stop breathing ! How dare you exhale CO2 ! I said stop breathing !”

This, I presume, is a parody of a person who believes in climate change. Clearly these people have swallowed the idea that CO2 is absolutely harmless under all circumstances, and we can have as much as we like. Here let me show you:

before the beginning of the Industrial Revolution, atmospheric carbon dioxide densities where at near starvation levels for planetary flora whereas the current atmospheric carbon dioxide density is still only 40% of the optimal level for planetary flora.

We need more CO2 its good for you, even if its poisonous. The people who wrote this must be the EXTERMINATING SLAVES of the fossil fuel companies!!!!

We should also probably stop chopping trees down, so they can benefit from all this beautiful CO2, but that is not part of the agenda either, maybe they are fossil fuel bought out loggers. Oh and wasn’t China bad for increasing its emissions? If emissions are good, surely they should be welcomed as saviours of the worlds plant life?

I ran a game once in which the criminal shape changing lizards who ran the world, were trying to terraform Earth to something more suitable to their biology….. Seems like reality has almost caught up….

Climate change is the kind of strange object which for many people seems to make a conspiracy of disparate powerful and non-powerful people, (Catholics, Satanists, socialists, politically diverse scientists, school children with hyper-weaponry), more believable than a conspiracy of neoliberals and established fossil fuel interests, who already have networks, paid for think tanks, paid for politicians and a documented reputation for deception and ruthlessness. Indeed the success of the latter can be shown by the fact that the former have not managed to get any thing done to delay climate change at all, and the latter have managed to do things which should make it worse.

Why is this displacement so?

Dangers of nuclear energy

January 17, 2020

There is quite a lot of space being spent on denying that nuclear energy is dangerous.

One way of doing this is to compare the number of deaths we can attribute to coal to the number of deaths coming from nuclear energy. Unfortunately I cannot paste in the graph from this site, but it alleges death rates from energy production per TWh are as follows:

  • 32.72 for brown coal
  • 24.62 for black coal
  • 18.43 for oil
  • 4.63 for biomass
  • 2.82 for gas
  • 0.07 for nuclear

It is impressive to see how many people die from fossil fuel poisoning.

We should also note that there are quite big disputes about how many people died as a result of Chernobyl (in Ukraine) and Fukushima (Japan). As Wikipedia notes in its current article on deaths in Chernobyl: “From 1986 onward, the total death toll of the disaster has lacked consensus; as peer-reviewed medical journal The Lancet and other sources have noted.”

These deaths are quite hard to measure – unless people have large scale radiation burns, then they could have died from other causes. There are political and business reasons for lowering the death count as well. The initial Soviet reports claimed 2 people had died at Chernobyl. Hardly anyone accepts that figure today. On the other hand, some people might blame unrelated sickness on the accidents. Again people may not have died but may have been sicker than they would have been. The radiation spread quite a long way. In 2016 The World Health Organisation said “more than 11,000 thyroid cancer cases had been diagnosed” in the three most affected countries, but they gave no information as to whether this was much higher than normal, per head of population.

I remember reading the early descriptions of the Fukushima accident which implied quite large amounts of radiation sickness amongst the workers who heroically went back in to try and shut it down. This is no longer mentioned. Hopefully, they all healed, rather than were ignored. However, the big problem is that, in neither Chernobyl or Fukushima, has it yet been possible to clean the site, or seal it permanently. Both sites are still problems.

Anyway, despite the lack of agreed figures, it certainly seems likely that fossil fuels have been more overtly deadly than nuclear energy.

However that does not mean we should automatically go for nuclear. There are still the problems of expense, subsidy and few trustworthy companies wanting to build them. Never mind the lack of enthusiasm people show for living near them. Or the difficulties of guaranteeing waste disposal safety for ever.

Jobs from Adani

January 17, 2020

An old bit of honesty from the Federal Government on the tens of thousands of jobs that were to be provided by the Adani mine. Note the revised figures are still supposed to be wonderful:

Senator Bridget McKenzie: “They [Adani] will be employing 1,500 through the construction phase and around about 100 ongoing”

This can be seen as a classic example of ignoring one’s promise and putting a happy face on.

However, these figures still seem significantly greater than the figures given in court for the full mine, where there are actually penalties for lying.

Since this interview jobs figures have been revised again – telling the likely truth is unpolitic. I guess we will not know until it’s all over, and we have just permanently lost water.

A further comment this time from the Australia Institute:

coal mining contributes 2.2% to the GDP of Australia, $39.8 billion of almost $1.85 trillion. [how much of that stays in Australia, or goes to Australian workers, taxes and royalties is another matter]

coal mining employs around 57,900 workers, making up only 0.4% of the almost 13 million-strong Australian workforce

There are still other figures.

The Australian Bureau of Statistics considers that their the relatively recently introduced Labour Account is now the best source of information on employment by industry. It is “specifically designed to produce industry estimates that present the most coherent picture of the Australian labour market.” However it could still be classed as experimental, and primarily includes people who directly work in the industry and not in its supply chains.

These figures shows that in the 2017-18 financial year, there were around 38,100 people employed in coal mining. 

Coal mining is not that important or that big an employer

How to deal with Unintended consequences

January 15, 2020

A simple list of apparently common responses to the unintended consequences of action:

  1. Refusal to accept the unintended consequences as real or significant.
  2. Acceptance that other people’s policies can have unintended consequences but not yours, because your policies are true.
  3. Accepting the unintended consequences, but saying they are irrelevant to what you are doing.
  4. Accepting the unintended consequences, but insisting that they come about because you have not applied your policies stringently enough. Intensifying your efforts and refusing weakness.
  5. Arguing that because the world is complex we cannot be sure these events have anything to do with our actions. We must continue.
  6. Suggesting that the unintended consequences have unpleasant political consequences and are therefore unreal or part of a plot.
  7. Recognising the problems, but claiming the problems are features.
  8. Accepting the unintended consequences but arguing they only affect inferior people without virtue (and we are treating them well enough already).
  9. Accepting the unintended consequences, but blaming evil forces for them.
  10. Refusing to accept the unintended consequences while still blaming evil forces.
  11. Trying to eliminate those who you blame as evil forces, even if they cannot be proven to have anything to do with it, and even if you deny the consequences are real.
  12. Trying to eliminate, or silence, those who are telling you about the unintended consequences.

These common responses make the traps of certainty harder to escape.

Siemans and Adani

January 12, 2020

German company Siemens has decided to support the Adani Carmichael mine, by providing a signaling system for the necessary rail line. Their justification seem more about fulfilling their recently signed contract, than preserving a functional ecology, or discovering the problems with business deals in advance.

This is their email to those who wrote to them objecting to their support for Adani.

Dear all,

We just finished our extraordinary Siemens Managing Board Meeting. We evaluated all options and concluded: We need to fulfil our contractual obligations. Also, we will establish an effective Sustainability Board to better manage environmental care in the future. Read here the reasons for the decision. (sie.ag/2FoFpAt).

Sincerely,
Joe Kaeser

Lets look at the website:

Siemens starts by denying there is any evidence connecting “this project” with the bush fires. Of course not. The project is not running yet; it can have nothing to do with the current bushfires. However, burning more coal makes climate driven bushfires more likely and probably worse. This project will add massive amounts of CO2 to the atmosphere, and consume massive amounts of water. If Australia has more seasons like the current one, we will continue to lose bush, agriculture and water. The mine will not make things better. Increased Greenhouse gas emissions probably spur on the unprecedented fires that have burnt throughout the world this year. Human induced climate change is not just a problem for Australia.

Siemens has “pledged carbon neutrality by 2030”. This is probably a good thing, but it is a bit weird to try and reach carbon neutrality by increasing other people’s lack of carbon neutrality. You cannot become carbon neutral by furthering carbon intensity. This is as absurd as the Australian government’s argument that carbon emissions from burning our coal, are not our problem, if other people buy it and burn it. Greenhouse gas emissions anywhere affect the whole world’s lack of carbon neutrality.

Siemens says correctly that the project is approved, and it is true that Australian governments have approved, and indeed made it as easy as possible, for example, gifting it infinite amounts of water in drought conditions. That cannot be argued. However, it is not unambiguously true that the local Aboriginal people are all in favour, or the Queensland government may not have had to rescind land rights claims to the area..

As we might expect, Matthew Canavan wrote to Siemens in support of the project, in a letter dated December 18, 2019, saying:

The Australian people clearly voted to support Adani at the federal election in May 2019, especially in regional Queensland. It would be an insult to the working people of Australia and the growing needs of India to bow to the pressure of anti-Adani protestors.

Oddly an election is never about a single issue, and even if people had simply voted for the Adani mine, they were voting based on known false job estimates, and official lack of consideration about what the mine is likely to mean for all the East Coast, south of the mine. It is correct that Labor never challenged those figures, or proposed different sources of jobs, and has backed the mine since the election, but this does not change the facts.

We might point out to Mr. Canavan that having their homes burn or dying in the fires, because of lack of government preparation, or concern, could be considered a much more severe insult to the working people of Australia.

The web site continues:

Siemens has signed the contract on December 10th, 2019.

This means they signed the contract in full awareness of the problems, and before receiving Mr Canavan’s letter. It is not as if they signed years ago. The recent signing implies they either could not have really cared about the problems, or cared to bother to inform themselves of the problems.

There were competitors who have been competing. Thus, whether or not Siemens provides the signaling, the project will still go ahead.

This reminds me of a film about the artist Banksy I saw recently in which people stole his street art to sell it, because someone else would probably steal it if they didn’t. The argument seems to be that we can commit crimes if there is a likelihood someone else will do it, if we don’t, or they will do it before we can.

Siemens then claim they have “embedded long-term sustainability-related targets in their management-incentive schemes,” and elsewhere in their defense “we will for the first time in Siemens history establish a Sustainability Committee”. This is slightly contradictory, but may mean they currently have a commitment to carbon neutrality without any consideration of sustainability.

Only being a credible partner whose word counts also ensures that we can remain an effective partner for a greener future. In this case, there is a legally binding and enforceable fiduciary responsibility to carry out this train signaling contract.

Sorry but being aware of the problems, and acting on that awareness, and not signing contracts without consideration of the problems is the only way that you will become (not remain) a participant in a greener future. Being prepared to break a contract when you discover it is morally wrong, despite the probable consequences, is the only way anyone can remain ethical. Everything else is about profit at the expense of a greener future.

Joe Kaeser’s final act of generosity is to promise to make plans to “support the reconstruction of destroyed infrastructure in the areas impacted by the terrible wildfires”. Yes many building companies will be doing that to make profit out of the disaster (and there is nothing wrong with that). However, this will not stop our global ecological problem. Companies must refuse to make profit out of destructive activities in the first place, and not place contractual obligations before ecological stability.

An edited version of this piece was accepted for John Menadue’s Pearls and Irritations web blog