Breaking News Archives - Alaska Politics and Elections https://www.apeonline.org Fri, 12 Nov 2021 01:24:22 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://i0.wp.com/www.apeonline.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/02/cropped-APE-small.jpg?fit=32%2C32&ssl=1 Breaking News Archives - Alaska Politics and Elections https://www.apeonline.org 32 32 174736357 COP26: How the quest to become carbon neutral is destroying the West’s development efforts while Alaska gets stuck in the crosshairs https://www.apeonline.org/2021/11/11/cop26-how-the-quest-to-become-carbon-neutral-is-destroying-the-wests-development-efforts-while-alaska-gets-stuck-in-the-crosshairs/ https://www.apeonline.org/2021/11/11/cop26-how-the-quest-to-become-carbon-neutral-is-destroying-the-wests-development-efforts-while-alaska-gets-stuck-in-the-crosshairs/#comments Fri, 12 Nov 2021 00:40:00 +0000 https://www.apeonline.org/?p=9745 The post COP26: How the quest to become carbon neutral is destroying the West’s development efforts while Alaska gets stuck in the crosshairs appeared first on Alaska Politics and Elections.

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Glasgow, UK-6 November,2021: Thousands of people taking part in a demonstration march
against climate change in Glasgow city centre during UN COP26 climate conference.

By Ben O'Rourke

November 11, 2021

“Carbon Neutral”

 

In September 1999, I drove from Haines to Whitehorse in Canada, then down to Skagway, Alaska to catch what we were led to believe was the last light plane out to Juneau before tourist season ended. It was a hectic trip made worse by an extreme hangover after wrapping filming on the Discovery Channel documentary we’d been making and not filling the car with fuel before leaving.

We wrongly assumed there would be a gas station not far across the border into Canada.

There wasn’t – and after driving for about two hours the full fuel gauge needle was well into the red. Luckily a small town appeared and we filled up in the nick of time.

The trip to Whitehorse is more than 240 miles and we needed to get there before the university library closed to film some old photos of the Gold Rush days. Had we had an electric car, we wouldn’t have made it as we would have been forced to stop for about an hour or so to recharge the battery. Even the more modern and expensive electric cars only have a range of approximately 230 miles.

My trip over the last week to the climate summit in Glasgow was about 400 miles there and back. No problem in my diesel SUV, which can cover nearly 600 miles on a full tank.

 

Eco-lunacy on a Grand Scale

It’s eco-lunacy on a grand scale, and yet in Alaska, the effort to attain an “energy mix” diversification with wind turbine projects on Fire Island next to Anchorage, near Healy, and near Delta Junction is praised by some as a remedy and offset to rising fuel prices. But these projects and this technology will not reduce our gas prices at the pump and they remain exorbitant and costly to maintain.

 

The question that comes to mind in the midst of all of the global warming and clean energy debate is what will happen in Britain when gas-driven vehicles are banned in 2030?

In the United States, the Democrats are likely to introduce a similar rule as in the United Kingdom. President Joe Biden is already shutting down pipelines at a time when our fuel prices are spiking. His attitude seems to be Americans will just have to deal with his party’s new planet-saving rules. At the COP26 meeting, Joe even insisted we’re in exigent times and “we only have a brief window before us.”

“At what point does it become too late?” asks Rick Whitbeck, Alaska State Director of Power the Future. “That voice has changed in the last three years. Greta: ‘We have 10 years’, A.O.C.: ‘We have 12 years’, John Kerry: ‘We’re past the point if we don’t do something in the next five years’. What’s the frikkin’ number??”

Kerry claimed in 2014 in Indonesia that “the window of time is still open for us to manage this threat.”  He added that “the window is closing.” The Indonesians completely ignored him and the nation is second, after China, on the list of those building coal power plants. 63 are under construction in Indonesia at the moment. China has more than 200 on the go. The rest of Asia is largely the same, with coal power stations sprouting across the map. Meanwhile, your hard-earned tax dollars are being spent on unreliable renewable energy projects, instead of coal and nuclear energies but for a few exceptions.

 

“I think if you stack it up against the economic impact of a too-fast transition away from fossil fuels, it’s more devastating,” notes Whitbeck, referring to the rapid push for so-called green energy that’s forcing the resource development sector’s workforce to take massive pay cuts as they’re nudged into the alternative energy sector.

Here in Scotland, the verdant green and pleasant lands have been tainted by thousands of turbines. While President Trump faced stiff opposition when planning the development of his picturesque golf course, there seemed little opposition to unsightly windmills blighting the landscape, especially south of Glasgow. The huge, loud, white rotating blades have the diameter of a soccer pitch yet contribute almost nothing to the national grid. Why are they so prevalent? Because private landowners are paid more than $50,000 USD per turbine, per year in government subsidies.

Where is all the money coming from? British taxpayers, of course.

A fair amount of turbines don’t even work and need non-renewable power to function. Huge areas of natural habitats and ecosystems for birds and other animals are destroyed so roads can be created (to get to the turbine installations). Birds are also killed by the blades, which they can’t see, while bees and other insects disappear into a blade-gauntlet when attempting to maneuver through the conflagration of wind farms. Sealife flees from the constant hum filtrating into the adjacent ocean waters which confuse whale and dolphin sonar. Massive amounts of energy are used to construct wind turbines, the instrumentality of which typically only lasts about 20 years after which time (when they malfunction) are dumped into huge pits because they’re too difficult and expensive to recycle.

It’s eco-lunacy on a grand scale, and yet in Alaska, the effort to attain an “energy mix” diversification with wind turbine projects on Fire Island next to Anchorage, near Healy, and near Delta Junction is praised by some as a remedy and offset to rising fuel prices. But these projects and this technology will not reduce our gas prices at the pump and they remain exorbitant and costly to maintain.

As I write, details of the Glasgow summit’s conclusion are being leaked, and go figure… Eco-leaders, protestors, professional advocates, and the indelible lobbyist contingencies are demanding more of the same. “Carbon dioxide-cutting targets by the end of 2022,” says the BBC headline.

Meanwhile in Russia and parts of Asia, business and development continue, uninhibited by punitive planet-saving laws.

Alaskan leadership at the city, borough, state, federal levels should be on guard and informed of what’s to come. COP26 is just a glimpse.

COP26: How the quest to become carbon neutral is destroying the West's development efforts while Alaska gets stuck in the crosshairsBen O’Rourke recently joined the Alaska Politics & Elections team. Ben has more than 25 years of media experience in radio, television, online, and newspapers working globally in Hong Kong, Singapore, Australia, and the United Kingdom. He accidentally landed into news journalism in 2003 and has been writing, reporting, and producing videos and nightly news programs for Hong Kong television and South China Morning Post ever since. He’s currently a freelance news editor at Fieldsports Britain, a popular hunting, shooting, and fishing channel on YouTube. Ben spent three weeks in Alaska filming a documentary and that time had a profound effect on him and it quickly became his favorite U.S. state.

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Sea Change: How visits to the Arctic by the Chinese Navy will increase and it’s partly Washington’s fault https://www.apeonline.org/2021/09/20/sea-change-how-visits-to-the-arctic-by-the-chinese-navy-will-increase-and-its-partly-washingtons-fault/ Mon, 20 Sep 2021 21:27:13 +0000 https://www.apeonline.org/?p=9684 The post Sea Change: How visits to the Arctic by the Chinese Navy will increase and it’s partly Washington’s fault appeared first on Alaska Politics and Elections.

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By Ben O'Rourke

September 20, 2021

The spotting of four Chinese People’s Liberation Army Navy (PLAN) ships 46 miles off the coast of Alaska at the end of August was a surprise for many when landing on newspaper headlines last week. The vessels were inside the United States’s exclusive economic zone but still within international waters.

According to Arctic Today, the Chinese boats were “conducting military and surveillance operations.” It’s unclear exactly what the focus of those operations was but a guided-missile cruiser and missile destroyer were part of the convoy.

By most accounts, the Chinese were there as a direct result of an increase in Western navy patrols in the South China Sea, which began more than a decade ago under the previous Democratic-led U.S. federal government.

Barack Obama ran for the presidency on a promise to end wars and heal the world – in a nutshell. The pledge won him a Nobel Peace Prize before he’d even done anything.

When it came to foreign policy, he actually stirred up new conflicts in the Middle East and North Africa, while at the same time top diplomat Hillary Clinton shifted the focus further East with her “pivot to Asia” agenda.

Effectively, the plan was to rein in China, a nation and communist government where economic development had surpassed everyone’s expectations and the West was too distracted by wars in Iraq and Afghanistan to even notice. The ‘pivot’ included a promise to re-open a base in the Philippines, forge military ties with former enemy Vietnam, and plant missile systems in South Korea, although the missiles were supposedly placed there as a deterrent against attacks by the North.

The U.S. was also joined by allies Australia and the United Kingdom in threatening more patrols after Beijing began developing islands and atolls in the South China Sea, some of which were claimed by the Philippines and other neighboring nations. Being a vital trade route was the British excuse for sending ships, including its new Queen Elizabeth class aircraft carrier.

Sea Change: How visits to the Arctic by the Chinese Navy will increase and it’s partly Washington’s fault

This trilateral force is now calling itself Aukus, presumably because acronyms beginning with ‘u’ are difficult to pronounce. Last week Washington promised to share nuclear submarine technology with the other two countries, which have both added submarines to their list of vessels that will patrol the region. Australia swiftly scrapped a deal to buy submarines from France, enraging Paris.

Only days before the Alaska encounter, a U.S. Navy destroyer sailed through the Spratly Islands, which, besides China, are claimed by the Philippines, Malaysia, Vietnam, and Brunei. Currently, the islands are under the control of Manila, which has been stepping up security of areas within its waters believed to hold unknown quantities of oil. Beijing has tried to push joint surveys of disputed seabeds in a bid to cozy up to Manila and tap into natural resources.

Japan has also been trying to sweet-talk Southeast Asia by supplying the coast guard boats to the Filipinos and signing a regional sea defense deal with Vietnam. Individually, outsiders view the countries with interests in the South China Sea as weak and crying out for support. When they join forces at ASEAN (Association of Southeast Asian Nations) summits, however, they often sign off on whatever China wants, usually won over by Beijing’s billions.

It’s unlikely any serious conflict will play out in the region. Both sides (China and everyone else) are sticking to well-defined propaganda patterns, which is ultimately why the Chinese boats were off the coast of Alaska in Arctic waters recently.

This northern arrival was the first time since 2015 Chinese boats traveled through the Bering Sea, another strategic shipping route. The U.S. Coast Guard described its interactions with the Chinese crews as “safe and professional” for an unplanned encounter.

“Security in the Bering Sea and the Arctic is homeland security,” said Coast Guard Pacific Area Commander Michael McAllister. “The U.S. Coast Guard is continuously present in this important region to uphold American interests and protect U.S. economic prosperity.”

Russian drills happen in the sea regularly but Moscow usually tells the Americans beforehand. Earlier this month, maneuvers involving 8,500 Russian military personnel and 50 ships were held and nobody really paid much attention to them. According to the Russian news agency Interfax, representatives from the U.S., Norwegian, British and Finnish navies were monitoring the exercises.

Besides the South China Sea, there’s the percolating unease in Taiwan, which Joe Biden’s administration looks set to aggravate again. Taipei has apparently asked the White House for permission to change the name of its representation in the capital from Taipei Economic and Cultural Representative Office to Taiwan Representative Office.

According to the South China Morning Post, Biden’s team is considering the change, which would go against the one-China policy and anger Beijing. The consequences of the move could result in more and closer mainland patrols and military drills around Taiwan. The newspaper quoted the defense department as saying 25 People’s Liberation Army planes entered the island’s “air defense identification zone” during drills earlier this month. Beijing said there were only 10.

Sea Change: How visits to the Arctic by the Chinese Navy will increase and it’s partly Washington’s faultBen O’Rourke recently joined the Alaska Politics & Elections team. Ben has more than 25 years of media experience in radio, television, online, and newspapers working globally in Hong Kong, Singapore, Australia, and the United Kingdom. He accidentally landed into news journalism in 2003 and has been writing, reporting, and producing videos and nightly news programs for Hong Kong television and South China Morning Post ever since. He’s currently a freelance news editor at Fieldsports Britain, a popular hunting, shooting, and fishing channel on YouTube. Ben spent three weeks in Alaska filming a documentary and that time had a profound effect on him and it quickly became his favorite U.S. state.

The post Sea Change: How visits to the Arctic by the Chinese Navy will increase and it’s partly Washington’s fault appeared first on Alaska Politics and Elections.

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Audit of State Jails “Very Disturbing” https://www.apeonline.org/2015/11/16/audit-of-state-jails-released/ Mon, 16 Nov 2015 20:45:42 +0000 http://apeonline.org/?p=5300 The Department of Corrections (DOC) finally released […]

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The Department of Corrections (DOC) finally released today its administrative review of the State’s correctional facilities. Senator Lesil McGuire, chair of the Senate Judiciary Committee, responded in a news release from her office.

“I find this report very disturbing and in need of immediate action,” McGuire said. “I appreciate that the administration has taken serious measures to investigate what appeared to be very concerning matters involving suicide and potential abusive situations, in some cases leading to death of inmates in custody. We need to hear more from those who work inside the system on how to employ best practices.”

doc report

Click to download DOC Report

The Senate Judiciary committee will hold hearings during the upcoming legislative session to address the issues identified in the report, and the committee looks forward to partnering with the administration in taking action, McGuire said.

“There is a confluence of increased numbers of inmates, an eroding level of care and structurally ineffective policies,” McGuire said. “The good news is that we’ve unearthed some of the problems. The Senate Judiciary committee will continue to review the ongoing issues and we are grateful for this additional information to help us reform Alaska’s prison system.”

This morning the House Finance committee heard a report by the PEW Charitable Trust that highlighted Alaska’s prison growth over the past 10 years.

“Ninety-five percent of all Alaskan inmates will ultimately be released back into society,” McGuire said. “It is in our state’s interest to give them the best chance of success and to reduce recidivism.”

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