Michael Green

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Build it back green

In Greener Homes on December 12, 2010

After the bushfires, many people are opting to re-build sustainably.

ANTHONY Smith’s Kinglake home burned down in the Black Saturday fires. “I heard the fire coming,” he says, “and it sounded like hundreds of helicopters droning together in the near distance.

“Once the house started to shake and vibrate with the noise, I thought: ‘I’m out of here’.”

He left, but the home he’d lived in for 24 years was reduced to a few charred stumps. When he set about rebuilding, he decided to do it differently: he wanted a passive solar design, one that would need little power and incur few bills. The home is still under construction, but based on the plans, it will achieve a 9-star energy rating.

Mr Smith is one of a number of residents in the area who are sharing their stories on the Build It Back Green website, coordinated by Green Cross Australia.

Mara Bún, CEO of Green Cross Australia, says personal experiences such as these can propel a wave of change, and not only among those rebuilding from the fires.

“The Black Saturday bushfires captured the hearts and minds of Australians in a deep way, and so we think these stories will inspire people to make changes in their own lives,” she says. “The information on the website about green building is very practical and applicable to everyone in the state.”

The Build It Back Green movement began in New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina devastated the city in 2006. “Now it’s happening all around the world where natural disasters occur and communities want to recover in a sustainable and resilient way,” Ms Bún says.

“The way we rebuild can either refuel the cycle by being very emissions intensive, or it can begin to break the cycle altogether.”

She says the website is a hub of information on low cost, sustainable and resilient building. It includes a guide developed by the Alternative Technology Association, containing tips on green materials and building techniques, together with lists of products and suppliers.

The website also features videos and profiles of people rebuilding from the fires, and details of local events.

“We’re really stressing community participation,” Ms Bún says. “Getting to know your neighbours is a hugely important factor as we confront these threats, especially in Victoria, which has so much risk from climate change.”

Mr Smith, a woodcutter and sawmiller, took time completing the design for his new home. He observed the sun’s path throughout the year before staking the orientation along an east-west axis, with a slight twist towards the sun on winter afternoons. “Kinglake is pretty cold, so I wanted to get maximum sun on the windows during the cooler months,” he says.

He sketched out a three-bedroom house just over 6 metres wide and 28 metres long. “It’s narrow, with a low pitching height,” he says, “so the rooms are very manageable sizes for the sun to warm up.”

The post-and-beam dwelling will have Hebel (Autoclaved Aerated Concrete) block walls and insulated slab floor, with stone paving to provide thermal mass near the north facing, double-glazed windows.

Mr Smith is also using recycled materials wherever he can, including reclaimed timber and bricks from a neighbour’s demolished home. “I felled trees on my block and milled the structural timbers,” he says, “so I’ll have my own floorboards and timber for the roof.”

Beekeeping

In Greener Homes on December 5, 2010

Hobby beekeepers create the land of food and honey.

LOUISE Davey’s backyard in Coburg is lined with well-tended vegie patches. Chooks cluck in their coop under the fig tree. But the most important residents – the queens of the food garden – live next to the olive tree in the middle of the yard.

Ms Davey has been an amateur apiarist for two years. “I just love watching the bees and getting the honey,” she says. “The people who live around my area love getting it too. I’m keeping quite a few families in honey from my two hives.”

Her bounty, now about 60 kilograms a year, has grown with each harvest. “Because I’m in the suburbs, the honey tastes slightly different every time. It reflects the plants the bees collected the nectar and pollen from,” she says.

There are about 2200 beekeepers registered with the Victorian Department of Primary Industries and around 1800 of those are hobbyists, according to apiary inspector Daniel Martin.

Although each local council has its own bylaws, backyard beekeepers are usually allowed to keep one or two hives, under the state’s Apiary Code of Practice. It is compulsory, however, to register with the department ($15 per year). “Bees are classed as livestock,” Mr Martin says. “Registered beekeepers have access to a honey testing program to help with early detection of an endemic honeybee brood disease.”

He says beekeeping is not only a way to source your own sweet bliss, but also provides an important ecosystem service. “Many people don’t realise that one in every three mouthfuls of food is dependent on honeybee pollination. By keeping bees you’re contributing to your neighbourhood’s food production.”

If you do it well, it’s also good for the bees. “Suburban hives are often really strong because they’re stationary and they’ve got access to nectar and pollen all year round,” Mr Martin says. “Many commercially run hives are migrated around the country and the bees often need supplementary feeding for extra nutrition.”

The DPI website has a series of useful how-to guides on beekeeping and safe management practices.

Beehives must be set back from your fence and should be placed in a sunny, sheltered spot with access to water. It’s best if they don’t face directly towards the street – the bees’ flight path must not cross low over the footpath. As a beekeeper, you’ll need safety equipment, including light-coloured clothing, gloves, a veil, a hive tool and a smoker to distract the bees while you harvest the honey.

Mr Martin says that if you care for your bees responsibly, they’ll happily go about their own beesness.

“Bees are like every animal – if they’re neglected they become unhappy,” he says. “Beekeeping isn’t a skill that comes overnight, so I highly recommend joining or liaising with a local beekeeping club.”

Ms Davey honed her skills with the beekeepers at Collingwood Children’s Farm and CERES in Brunswick. She suggests that newcomers get hands-on experience before they strike out on their own.

“Although bees are fairly low maintenance, it’s a little daunting the first time you open up your hives and you’ve got hundreds of bees flying all around you,” she says.

While she’s suffered her “fair share” of stings, they usually come when a bee inadvertently falls into her slippers. “Bees aren’t aggressive – they’ll only sting if they think they’re being mistreated.”

Good folk

In Blog on November 30, 2010

WHILE I was on the Sunshine Coast, I attended a bamboo-building workshop. Actually, it was more of a tea-drinking workshop, with occasional breaks in which we dabbled with bamboo.

The workshop was hosted by Tim and Kate, who run a café called Chocolate Jungle at the Woodford Folk Festival. There, from within a huge structure concocted of bamboo and tarps, they serve chocolaty organic treats to all comers at all hours.

This year, they wanted a trial run, in the hope that construction would go more smoothly at the festival. I’d arranged to meet Kate in Nambour. As we drove to the workshop, she laughed often and told many tales – ukulele-playing, festival-going, caravan-living tales.

We arrived at a bamboo grove in Cooran, where there were about 60 kinds of bamboo, some growing as tall as 30 metres; others short and fine, with gently spreading leaves like fairy’s wings. When the wind blew, the clumps clicked and clacked as though they could collapse at any moment.

But bamboo is strong and flexible: a few years ago, when I visited Hong Kong, I was astonished to see modern skyscrapers enveloped in bamboo scaffolding. Another reason it’s a good building material is that it grows quickly, some varieties 60 centimetres a day, under the right conditions. In two years, a pole can be strong enough to use in a temporary structure.

Our building, however, grew slowly. Tim is a dreamer, tall, tanned and lean: with a faraway look in his eye he’ll conjure a glorious second storey, not noticing the first is lacking its corner posts. After four days, although the structure was far from complete, it had taken shape in Tim’s mind; and in any case, we’d all enjoyed ourselves tremendously.

After the workshop, I set a southerly course and happened to hitch through Woodford. I got a lift from two women, Danielle and Kassandra, who were volunteers with the folk festival’s art department. They took me to their shed, where they were assembling giant decorative flowers. They’ve been volunteering once a week all year, and will shortly begin a six week full-time stint. They assured me that Woodford is less a festival and more a way of life.

Later that day, a funeral director called James drove me from Toowoomba to Warwick. He dropped me at O’Mahoney’s Hotel, next to the railway station, for a cheap room.

One of my resolutions on this trip was to stay in old country pubs. At O’Mahoney’s I found just what I was looking for: high ceilings, rambling hallways and a broad verandah. The hotel was built in 1887; now, trains rarely stop and the main street has long since migrated east. On the first night, the owners, Joan and Glen, invited me to eat with them. I stayed a second day.

Every Wednesday evening, the Warwick folk circle meets in the Ladies Room of the hotel. In turn, the members play a song or recite a poem, both originals and covers. It was the day before Remembrance Day, and one man sung Eric Bogle’s anti-war ballad No Man’s Land. I remember my dad listening to that song when I was a kid.

In many ways, it was an unremarkable scene. They seemed like ordinary townsfolk – tradies and salespeople; café owners and teachers; parents and children – yet, here they were, exercising the greatest gift. I found their songs deeply moving, the more so for the fact they were playing together.

When I hear simple singing like that I seem to lose track of everything I think I know; or, at least, it disappears for a while, and comes back gleaming, like a vintage car that’s had a cut and polish. I think I’ll take up the ukulele – one way or another, it’ll make people cry.

O'Mahoney's

Wastewater recycling

In Greener Homes on November 28, 2010

A new project takes the waste out of wastewater.

WHILE it may seem polite to keep the lid on toilet talk, if you’re pursuing household sustainability, you can’t ignore your sewer.

Rita Narangala, engineer at Yarra Valley Water, explains that our sewerage system not only consumes buckets of potable water, but also demands electricity for pumping and treating.

“It’s something a lot of people don’t immediately think about, but sewage is actually quite energy intensive to collect and treat,” she says. “When you install efficient fittings, it’s a real double-whammy in terms of the savings in water and in the energy for supplying the water and treating the sewage.”

In Kinglake West, Yarra Valley Water is building a research project that changes the way the company deals with our pipes. It undertook a life cycle assessment of wastewater options for the environmentally sensitive area, which is bordered by national park.

When the plumbing and infrastructure is complete, up to 90 homes will have an alternative sewerage service, comprising urine diverting toilets, greywater treatment and reuse systems, and a pressure sewer.

The measures are expected to halve wastewater discharge, slash nutrient discharge by about 80 per cent, and cut greenhouse gas emissions by one-third compared with a conventional sewer.

One element of the approach in Kinglake West is a switch from “nutrient removal” to “nutrient recovery”; that is, turning the problem into a solution.

Presently, the high-nutrient content in effluent can cause pollution in our waterways and bays. It’s a problem that must be overcome by extensive and expensive treatment. At the same time, however, our farmers buy in artificial fertilisers in a quest to boost their soil fertility.

“Urine is rich in phosphorus and nitrogen, so diverting it is an easy way to capture a small fraction of the wastewater, which is nutrient-rich and relatively low in bacteria and pathogens as well,” Ms Narangala says.

Yarra Valley Water will work with a local farmer to trial the use of urine as a fertiliser replacement (most likely on a non-food crop, such as turf). Projects of this kind are well advanced overseas, especially in Scandinavia.

“Phosphorus is an essential plant nutrient – there’s really no replacement for it,” Ms Narangala says. “But there’s a view amongst scientists that reserves could run out in the next few generations. The peak level of production, after which demand outstrips supply, could occur much sooner.

“We need to find alternative nutrient sources – human waste is one, as well as efficiency gains in the way it’s mined and the way we produce food.”

While the solutions adopted by Yarra Valley Water in its Kinglake West project are specifically designed to suit local conditions, they’re a sign of changes in the pipeline elsewhere.

In sewered suburbs it’s more difficult to retrofit large-scale greywater and nutrient recycling all at once. But as urban infill and infrastructure upgrades continue, the utilities will seek out solutions that cut water and energy use, and turn nutrient pollution into a resource.

Ms Narangala says decentralised treatment and recycling may become more common. “Our infrastructure is in the ground already, but we’re looking at alternatives to simply replacing parts when necessary. Water companies recognise that we’re in a unique position to recover and reuse nutrients. The industry is assessing the best ways to build a sustainable sewage system.”

Read this article on the Age website.

For more information on peak phosphorus, see Phosphorus Futures, founded by researchers from the Institute for Sustainable Futures at the University of Technology Sydney. 

Pacific islands face change that’s hard to believe in

In Environment, Social justice on November 27, 2010

As the next round of climate negotiations continue in Cancún, the future of low-lying Pacific islands looks like a matter of faith. Written with photographer Rodney Dekker.

FAAUI Siale is sitting in her open-walled home, at the northern end of Tuvalu’s atoll capital, Funafuti. Three generations live here, side-by-side on a sliver of coral sand barely 50 metres wide. Ocean waves thump the land to her left, and a lagoon laps the shore on her right.

It is Sunday morning, and Siale sings along to hymns on the radio as a heavy wind blows and coconut palms rattle and splay towards the ground. To an outsider, everything about this scene seems precarious; but not to Siale – and for that, she claims divine assurance.

Tuvalu is the world’s second least populous nation, after Vatican City. Its 12,000 residents live on several reefs and atolls located halfway between Australia and Hawaii. Nearly all the land is less than three metres above the sea.

The director of the tiny nation’s environment department, Matio Tekinene, says his people are already suffering the ill effects of climate change.

Rising sea levels and more frequent king tides are causing coastal erosion and salinating the groundwater, making it hard to grow the traditional subsistence root crop, pulaka. The fresh water supply is now restricted to rainfall, which arrives in unfamiliar patterns at unfamiliar times. Coral bleaching is reducing fish stocks close to shore.

“Food security related to climate change is a very important issue for us,” he says. “Tuvaluan people, we live very much on our limited crops and marine resources. Nowadays there is a great change, because we have difficulty to grow these natural foods.”

But Faaui Siale, 60, is unconcerned. She does not accept that the sea level is rising. “I believe there won’t be any more floods, because of the covenant between Noah and the Lord God,” she says, with her daughter-in-law interpreting. “They made a promise during those days that there won’t be another flood in the world.”

It’s a belief shared by many of her compatriots. Recently, a survey conducted by the Tuvalu Christian Church found that nearly one-third of the population does not believe in climate change, based on their interpretation of the Old Testament.

In Genesis, Chapter 9, after the great flood subsides, God tells Noah there will never again be a flood to destroy the earth, and chooses the rainbow as the symbol of that promise.

Earlier in the morning, Siale and her family gathered next door to worship with their neighbour, Reverend Tafue Lusama, a minister in the Tuvalu Christian Church. The church is the country’s dominant religious organisation, with a membership comprising nine out of ten Tuvaluans.

Reverend Lusama, however, prefers an alternative interpretation of God’s pledge to Noah. “God is faithful to his covenant and He is not causing climate change and sea level rise,” he says. “It is human-induced, not divinely induced.”

The minister has built a low, concrete sea wall to protect his home. “Climate change is one of the church’s focal areas,” he says. “We believe that whatever impacts the lives of our people impacts the church, and climate change definitely affects the lives and the spirituality of our people.”

For the past five years, Reverend Lusama has been the chair of the Tuvalu Climate Action Network. The group coordinates the various NGOs who provide climate programs within the country, and also sends delegates to international forums, advocating for strong international action to cut greenhouse gas emissions.

“We’ve been raising our voices to be heard by the industrialised countries and the international community and still we are being ignored,” he says. “Land is equivalent to life in our culture. If your land has been gradually eroded by the sea, you are looking at your life being eaten away.

“Put simply, why should I die for the sake of luxury for others? That is injustice.”

Tuvalu is not alone among island nations crying out for deep emissions cuts by major polluters. At last year’s UN Copenhagen conference, the Alliance of Small Island States (AOSIS) argued for a legally binding agreement consistent with a global temperature rise of less than 1.5 degrees Celsius – a level that would give their nations a chance of survival.

They will take a similar case to this year’s UN negotiations in Cancún, Mexico, which run from November 29 to December 10.

Early this month, Kiribati – Tuvalu’s near neighbour in the Pacific – hosted its own meeting, the Tarawa Climate Change Conference. The President of Kiribati, Anote Tong, says the discussions sought to establish a more conciliatory atmosphere before the resumption of UN-sponsored talks.

“Some countries are more vulnerable now, but every country is vulnerable in one form or another – I believe the international community is in agreement on that issue. We should start by identifying the points of agreement and move on. Let’s not begin with the most contentious issues. Let’s work those out over time,” he says.

At the Tarawa conference, a dozen countries, including China, Japan, Australia and Brazil, signed the Ambo Declaration, affirming the “urgent need for more and immediate action” and calling for “concrete decisions” in Mexico. The United States, the United Kingdom and Canada attended the daylong meeting, but only as observers.

Kelly Dent, climate change policy advisor for Oxfam, says that while the significance of the declaration shouldn’t be overstated, it may be useful as a reference point for the coming negotiations. “Any conference that brings together these developing and developed countries, including China, is significant.”

She says that although the Pacific island nations will call for a legally binding agreement to be signed this week, they will settle for less, especially if there’s a push to fast track adaptation finance.

“If they see strong signals towards a legally binding agreement next year in South Africa, then I think that may be enough to satisfy them that significant progress is being made,” she says.

“People from these countries need reduced emissions but they also need to see well-targeted money to adapt to the impacts they’re seeing now, and they need to have a say in where that money goes.”

In Kiribati and Tuvalu, adaptation projects are already underway – from building sea walls and planting mangroves to prevent coastal erosion, to installing water tanks to supply drinking water and promoting home gardening as a means of strengthening food security and halting declining health standards.

But these measures are just the beginning. President Tong says his country cannot afford to cover its adaptation needs without significant international assistance. “With the resource constraints that we have as a developing country it’s not easy for us to address these challenges,” he says.

“The full impact of climate change is a tide we cannot stem. We keep moving back from the shoreline. In a country like Kiribati, with very narrow islands, the room to move back is very limited.”

Back on Funafuti, Reverend Lusama maintains hope. “We are optimistic about Cancún and what is going to happen there and the reason is that we cannot afford to doubt,” he says. “We believe in humanity and its ability to do the right thing at the right time.”

As the winds blow and the tides change by Faaui Siale’s simple home, it’s clear that she and her family are at the mercy of forces far larger than themselves, no matter her beliefs. The people of Kiribati and Tuvalu must hope their prayers do not go unanswered.

Read this article, and see Rodney Dekker’s multimedia show, on the Sydney Morning Herald website.

See the article as it was published in WA News:

WA News article 1

WA News article 2

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