Senin, 16 Desember 2019

Australia bushfire: Boy, 12, drives pickup to flee with dog - BBC News

Police have rescued a 12-year-old boy who fled a raging bushfire in Western Australia by driving his brother's pickup to safety with their dog.

Luke Sturrock was alone at home when a fast-moving blaze threatened the town of Mogumber, north of Perth, on Sunday.

His dad, Ivan Sturrock, and older brother were out fighting the fire as it ripped through the area.

They told him to flee to an orange tree about 4km (2.4 miles) away if the fire got too close to their home.

When the fire closed in, the boy grabbed his dog and escaped in his brother's Ford Ranger.

About an hour later, firefighters who were battling the blaze nearby came across the boy behind the wheel of the vehicle and pulled him over.

"Typical farm boy, he was pretty clever, I think the problem was he just didn't quite know where to go and it was hard to see with all the smoke," Craig Spencer, of the Bindoon Bushfire Brigade, told ABC Radio Perth.

"So I think he probably panicked a bit and when we found him he was pulled up on the side of the road."

The fire crew took him to safety and left him with police, who reunited him with his father.

Mr Sturrock said he was proud of his son.

"We taught him to drive since he was about seven just in case things like this do happen and I was quite proud of him; he did exactly what we told him to do," Mr Sturrock told ABC News.

Dalwallinu police officer Michael Daley, who reunited the boy with his father, urged families to "have a plan and know it" if a bushfire threatened their home.

Emergency warnings for dangerous bushfires have been issued in eastern and western Australia.

In the state of Western Australia, firefighters have been battling a bushfire north of Perth for six days.

Media playback is unsupported on your device

The blaze, which has engulfed more than 13,000 hectares of land, was downgraded on Monday, with evacuated residents expected to return home.

Meanwhile, authorities issued fresh warnings about a "mega blaze" after it spread beyond containment lines and razed 20 houses near Sydney.

How bad are the bushfires in Australia?

Since September, six people have died in a bushfire crisis that has engulfed Australia, particularly the eastern states of New South Wales (NSW) and Queensland.

The blazes have destroyed more than 700 homes and blanketed towns and cities in smoke.

The bushfires and extreme weather have ravaged Australia's landscape, sparking public debate about the need for stronger climate action.

Last week, parts of Sydney suffered air quality 22 times worse than the clean air standard.

A heatwave sweeping east across the country is also expected to increase the fire risk this coming week.

Across the nation, temperatures are set to exceed 40C in many areas. Parts of Sydney could reach 46C by the end of the week, meteorologists say.

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2019-12-16 13:56:04Z
CBMiMWh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmJiYy5jb20vbmV3cy93b3JsZC1hdXN0cmFsaWEtNTA4MDYxOTnSATVodHRwczovL3d3dy5iYmMuY29tL25ld3MvYW1wL3dvcmxkLWF1c3RyYWxpYS01MDgwNjE5OQ

Australians Love Rooftop Panels. That’s a Problem for Big Solar - Yahoo Finance

(Bloomberg) -- With its sunny skies and plenty of available land, it’s not hard to see why large-scale solar projects were drawn to Australia.

Yet a rush of household installations has started to play havoc with the economics of those sprawling facilities. Combine that with the struggle shared by grids around the world as they move from round-the-clock power generation to more volatile renewable sources, and the outlook for large-scale solar in Australia looks less rosy.

About one in every four homes in the nation of almost 25 million now has solar panels and that number continues to rise, increasing power supply and lowering consumption from the grid during the middle of the day, when the sun is at its strongest. It has even forced some utility-scale solar plants to shut down during their peak production times or risk having to pay the grid to take the electricity they produce.

“Rooftop solar is an ever-growing risk for its large-scale counterpart,” said Lara Panjkov, an analyst at BloombergNEF in Sydney. “When rooftop solar operates, it reduces grid demand and suppresses wholesale electricity prices.”

BloombergNEF projects a sharp fall in income for large-scale solar in the next two to three years. The average price that plants receive in Victoria state, a market which includes the nation’s second-biggest city Melbourne, could drop as low as A$41 per megawatt-hour in 2022, from around A$140 so far this year.

The government’s subsidy regime also puts big solar developers at a disadvantage, according to Kim Nguyen, head of Australia operations at renewables investor Foresight Group. Incentives for off-grid solar can still cover 30% to 40% of their total cost, although they are being progressively scaled back. Support from the government’s large-scale generation certificates typically amounts to less than 5% of a project’s capital cost, Nguyen said.

Innogy SE, which is building the country’s biggest solar farm to date, is looking at potential solar investments “with more conservative assumptions than a year or two ago,” said Matthew Dickie, the regulations manager at the major German utility’s Australian unit.

One area where he’s looking for change is in the calculation of transmission losses. Under the current system, marginal loss factors -- a measure of how much electricity is lost over power lines -- are assessed by the market operator and have hit solar plants in remote locations particularly hard. Several industry players, including Innogy, are pushing for those losses to be calculated on an average basis across the entire network.

“Despite the room for policy improvement, Australia does have a lot of constants which make it still worthy of investigation, such as great solar and wind resource, a relatively low population density, a strong economy and robust rule of law,” Dickie said.

The growing headwinds faced by big solar have contributed to a drop off in renewables investment growth this year. Investment in new large-scale solar in Australia has trailed off this year but still totals about $7.9 billion since 2015, BloombergNEF data show. Approximately $8.3 billion was spent on rooftop solar in Australia in the period, according to BNEF estimates.

“For so many reasons, the boom in utility-scale solar has gone,” said Stephen Panizza, head of renewables at Sydney-based Federation Asset Management.

It won’t make sense to invest in large-scale solar until it becomes economical to add as much as 6 hours of battery storage, the level at which solar would be able to continue supplying the grid well into the peak evening demand period, Panizza said. That’s still a few years away and, in the meantime, there is more growth potential in wind power in Australia, he said.

Foresight’s Nguyen is not as pessimistic. She remains open to investing in big solar projects, pointing out that it still has advantages over rooftop. Large-scale facilities are more reliable -- they are maintained with much more rigor and attention than your average rooftop panel -- and more flexible, being able to switch on and off rapidly in response to price signals. It’s also more economical to add battery storage to a large solar plant than to each individual household.

There’s little doubt that Australia needs to add substantial renewable generation capacity in the years ahead as aging coal fired plants retire -- the market operator’s latest long-term plan said that more than 30 gigawatts of large-scale clean energy projects would be needed by 2040. Still, with more than 2 gigawatts of solar projects commissioned over the next three years, there are concerns in the industry that some will face significant financial stress.

Marginal loss factors, grid issues and network penalties “are already hurting utility-scale solar owners’ revenue models,” said Panjkov. “Most of these issues are likely to get worse before they get better.”

To contact the reporter on this story: James Thornhill in Sydney at jthornhill3@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Ramsey Al-Rikabi at ralrikabi@bloomberg.net, Rob Verdonck

For more articles like this, please visit us at bloomberg.com

©2019 Bloomberg L.P.

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2019-12-16 11:00:00Z
CBMiVWh0dHBzOi8vZmluYW5jZS55YWhvby5jb20vbmV3cy9hdXN0cmFsaWFucy1sb3ZlLXJvb2Z0b3AtcGFuZWxzLXByb2JsZW0tMTkwMDAwNzA5Lmh0bWzSAV1odHRwczovL2ZpbmFuY2UueWFob28uY29tL2FtcGh0bWwvbmV3cy9hdXN0cmFsaWFucy1sb3ZlLXJvb2Z0b3AtcGFuZWxzLXByb2JsZW0tMTkwMDAwNzA5Lmh0bWw

Australia's state governments get tough on climate protesters - Al Jazeera English

Climate activist Greg Rolles does not enjoy breaking the law, but he feels like there is no other option.

"Sometimes you've got to put the common good of all people ahead of your own needs and interests," Rolles told Al Jazeera. "I don't want to be bullied by the media or deal with police, but I also don’t want to leave the next generation with the burden of a burning home."

Rolles, 37, is a member of Christian Climate Action Australia.

In November last year, he spent several hours suspended in a bamboo tripod he had erected over a railway line used to transport coal to the Abbot Point terminal, about 200 kilometres (124 miles) south of Townsville in far north Queensland. Abbot Point is owned by Adani, an Indian mining company, which is the focus of significant protest as it prepares to open a new coal mine that could affect the Great Barrier Reef.

Arrested and charged with three counts including trespassing, Rolles argued in court that his actions were permissible under the ‘extraordinary emergency’ defence, which says individuals are not criminally liable if they are acting in response to a sudden emergency. An oft-cited example would be shipwrecked sailors forced to eat the weakest crew member in order to survive.

The magistrate did not agree that the situation was an emergency. Rolles was found guilty, fined 7,000 Australian dollars ($4,810), and ordered to pay 2,233.40 Australian dollars ($1,535) to Aurizon, the country’s rail freight operator. Aurizon is now suing Rolles for 75,000 Australian dollars ($51,562) in damages.

But as climate protests become widespread, it is not just fines with which activists are being threatened. 

Australia protests

The authorities in some Australian states are taking a tougher line on protest because they say the tactics of groups such as Extinction Rebellion (XR) put people at risk [File: Tony McDonough/EPA]

Under new laws recently enacted in Queensland, people using so-called ‘dangerous devices’ – such as the lock-on devices that activists use to attach themselves to each other or to immovable objects such as fences and rail tracks – risk prison.

The law was developed after a series of disruptive Extinction Rebellion actions in Brisbane in mid-2019, in which more than 70 people were arrested and charged by police.

Increasing risks

Queensland Premier Annastacia Palaszczuk argued the legislation was necessary because police and bystanders were at risk.

"Inside these cylinders and drums are glass fragments – even butane gas containers – so that anyone trying to cut a protester free will be injured or worse," Palaszczuk told Queensland Parliament in August.

There is no evidence that the protesters in Queensland have used devices with glass or gas. Under the law, police also have the power to search anyone they reasonably suspect is in possession of a lock-on device. People found using such devices could face up to two years in jail.

The magistrate in Rolles’ case said that Rolles could have used other methods to make his views heard, such as speaking to his local member of parliament or taking part in a lawful protest. Rolles said these suggestions were inadequate.

"This is a climate emergency, a major crisis our political leaders are ignoring," he told Al Jazeera. "We only have one planet home and it’s burning… If we don’t use non-violent protest, we won’t get in the way. History shows this."

Matt McDonald, an associate professor at the University of Queensland and an expert in climate politics, agrees that protests are key to changing government policy on issues such as climate change.

"We tend to see action from governments even in the face of their ideological tendencies when they sense that public opinion is going in the other direction," McDonald told Al Jazeera.

"For example, in the 2007 election, [then-Prime Minister] John Howard promised carbon pricing… The scale of public opinion in polls and protests can end up putting a lot of pressure on a government."

McDonald said that the Queensland Labor government’s new legislation was more about sending a signal to its more conservative voters rather than actually stopping protests.

"Using the idea of disruption or concern for health or well-being is thoroughly disingenuous," he explained. "It’s a strategy that helps them stay in power in the next election; they need to be seen as not being aligned to groups like Extinction Rebellion."

'Draconian' law

In Tasmania, Australia’s southernmost state, even stricter anti-protest laws may soon be enacted.

Australia climate protests

Activists from the Extinction Rebellion (XR) have been holding protests across Australia this year [File: Tony McDonough/EPA]

The Workplace (Protections from Protesters) Amendment Bill would amend existing legislation found unconstitutional by the Australian High Court in 2017 because it restricted free speech. The amendment recently passed Tasmania’s lower house of parliament and will be discussed in the upper house when it sits again in 2020.

Leader of the Tasmanian Greens, Cassy O’Connor, described the proposed amendment to Al Jazeera as ‘draconian’.

"The law makes everywhere in Tasmania a potential workplace where people protesting face arrest. It removes police ‘move on’ powers, where police should ask protectors to move on [prior to arrest]," she said. "A person obstructing a business or taking part in a protest in a public place means that police can arrest them immediately under the act."

Dispatches from the front lines of environmental reporting

Individuals found guilty of breaking this law could face jail terms of 18 months for a first offence, and four years for a second offence. Threatening to protest a business on social media would also become a criminal act under the amendment.

"This is draconian in that it provides an incredibly broad definition of business activity," O’Connor said. "Critically, it is designed to have a chilling effect on dissent on an island that has a long and proud history of public protest."

The Tasmanian Chamber of Commerce and Industry (TCCI) said they welcomed the proposed legislation because it would protect businesses and workers.

"The TCCI supports absolutely the right of people to protest lawfully, but not to conduct economic terrorism," CEO Mark Bailey said in a statement provided to Al Jazeera.

However, many are doubtful that tough laws will stop climate change activists.

"If you’re chaining yourself to a fence or a bulldozer, these people aren’t thinking selfishly about these results, they’re already really mobilised," McDonald said. "For every person who might be dissuaded, there will be someone else who will want to do it."

Nicole Rogers from the School of Law and Justice at Southern Cross University believes that the definition of what constitutes ‘lawful’ behaviour may even begin to change as climate protests become more widespread.

'No safe place'

"Standards of behaviour aren’t stable, especially when change is inevitable," she told Al Jazeera. "With climate change, there’s no safe place, there’s nothing we can take for granted anymore. So the concept of disruption and shifting standards really comes to light in this situation."

"A process of ongoing adjustments in the face of galloping catastrophic change lies ahead of us," Rogers explained. "With the advantage of hindsight, we’re going to be judged very harshly – what seems reasonable now will come to seem unreasonable for future generations."

Australia's Mine Games

Activist Rolles says the threat of jail is not enough to stop him and others from pushing for climate action. As a Christian, he believes it is his moral, civil, and spiritual duty to act, and since November last year, he has been arrested on two additional occasions.

"It’s either stand up now and do civil disobedience, or face a future of a living hell," Rolles said. "I don’t want to face punishment, I don’t want to face jail or fines, but I’m more scared for the next generation."

"We have so many freedoms in Australia because our ancestors fought for them," he added. "If we don’t fight hard and give everything we’ve got, we will lose all these privileges in the climate crisis."

O’Connor of the Tasmanian Greens agrees.

"All across Australia, hundreds of thousands are taking to the streets to protect the climate," she said. "Instead of looking at its own policies on the environment, the government’s response is designed to make the problem go away by locking it up.

"People don’t want to go to jail, but you cannot jail your way out of the climate crisis."

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2019-12-16 06:43:00Z
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Sabtu, 14 Desember 2019

Farewell, Tiger! Australia prepares to say goodbye to the U.S. playing captain for good - Golf.com

MELBOURNE, Australia — It’s time to address the Big Cat in the room. These words are difficult to write, especially for an Australian writer. But here goes…

The Sunday singles finale to the Presidents Cup is likely to be the last time Tiger Woods plays tournament golf in Australia.

Woods, the U.S. Team’s playing captain, will cap arguably the greatest edition in the 25-year history of this biennial contest with a match against International rookie Abraham Ancer. There is a good chance it will be the last time the golf world gets to see Woods, the artist, use Alister MacKenzie’s famed Royal Melbourne as his canvas. At least under the pressure of a tournament.


Why? For one thing, Woods missed out on automatic qualification for this year’s Cup. He was fortunate to have a self-pick up his sleeve and, thankfully, the choice was easy when he won a record-equalling 82nd PGA Tour title in Japan in late October. Gosh, we’re lucky he did — but there’s no guarantee he’ll do the same in the future.

The American team keeps getting replenished with studs like Patrick Cantlay and Xander Schauffele, rookies this week. In years to come, young guns like Matt Wolff and Collin Morikawa will fill out the team.

Secondly, the Presidents Cup won’t return to Australia until at least 2027, when Woods will be 51. The 2021 Cup is at Quail Hollow and TPC Harding Park in 2025 are the only confirmed venues. The 2023 edition is likely to be held in Asia.

It has been eight years since Woods played Down Under — when he was here for the 2011 Cup and Australian Open. It is getting harder and harder for Woods to make special trips to Australia with a PGA Tour schedule that encompasses nearly the entire calendar year. Finally, the Australian Open’s spot on the schedule — it’s usually held during the week of Thanksgiving in the U.S. — runs up against Woods’ Hero World Challenge held in the Bahamas in early December.

It’s heartbreaking to consider the possibility that Sunday at Royal Melbourne is Woods’ competitive swan song in Australia. The fans down here have relished every minute of the six trips he’s made. And hasn’t he been glorious to watch this week?

Consider that beautifully-flighted, sawed-off short iron draw he threw into the 18th hole in Friday’s foursomes match. It left his club like a laser but landed like a butterfly with sore feet, setting Justin Thomas up for a birdie to win their match. The pair’s subsequent celebration will go down in Presidents Cup folklore.

Remember at the par-3 5th during Thursday’s four-ball, when the 15-time major winner hit a bump-and-run from a nasty lie between two greenside bunkers that dropped obediently into the hole for birdie? It was so exquisite that teammate Thomas had no issues with Woods channeling Jordan Spieth and telling his partner, “Go get that!”

Those are just the two most recent additions to a long highlight reel of Woods on the Melbourne Sandbelt.

His obsession with the revered Aussie golf region began in 1997. The Californian made his first trip to Melbourne’s Sandbelt — his second to Australia after the 1996 Aus Open — to contest the Australian Masters at Huntingdale Golf Club. He tied for a respectable eighth.

That was in February, two months before he’d secure a historic win at another Masters. You know, the one at Augusta National.

Thousands of fans lined the fairways of Huntingdale to get a glimpse of the chosen one who they’d read about in magazines and newspapers — well before social media, of course.

They’d heard of his fearsome power, but Woods only hit one driver in the opening round. As a local reporter detailed at the time, “A graphic impression of the slightly built young man’s power was provided with almost every shot. At the par-5 14th, at 554 metres (605 yards) one of the longest in Australian tournament golf, Woods humbled the hole with a 3-wood and 2-iron.”

The fan stampede synonymous with Tigermania was in its infancy in 1997, but already annoying fellow pro golfers. In the same Aussie Masters, local pro Brett Ogle, himself a two-time PGA Tour winner, snapped to fans chasing Woods: “Tiger’s not the only one playing out here.”

Maybe not. But Woods is perhaps the only golfer who captures the imagination of Australians who don’t even play golf.

Woods’ next trip to the Sandbelt came in 1998, when in his Presidents Cup debut he demanded captain Jack Nicklaus send him out on Sunday face local star Greg Norman in the singles at Royal Melbourne. Woods beat the Shark on the 18th hole, but the International team secured their only Cup victory to date.

The pinnacle of Woods’ Sandbelt history came in 2009 when he picked apart the world-renowned Kingston Heath en route to a meaningful Australian Masters victory. Although his first appearance in Australia in 11 years cost the Victorian state government a reported $3 million, Woods justified the spend by wowing fans with beautifully-crafted golf shots while leading from start to finish. He added the now-defunct tournament’s gold jacket to the green jackets already in his wardrobe.

Ten years later, Aussie fans have jumped at the chance to see the reigning Masters champion tackle Royal Melbourne while in vintage form.

Among those in the crowd was Alex Gough, a New York-based Australian who made the 10,000-mile journey home from his Brooklyn residence just to see Woods. Gough, 32, has been a member of Royal Melbourne since 2008 and was on hand to witness Woods at the 2011 Cup.

But this time is different, says Gough.

“I was there in 2011 … it was cool, but Tiger hadn’t won in two years. This Presidents Cup has so much more pop in it with him playing so well.

“The way Tiger carves his irons around Royal Melbourne is so impressive. He knows exactly where to hit it and where to miss it.

“I went out and watched the (2001) WGC-Match Play at (nearby) Metropolitan GC as an introduction to golf. But Tiger was the catalyst for getting me out and taking up the sport.

Gough is just one of 30,000 fans who have crammed into Royal Melbourne each day to get a glimpse of Woods.

“To see him 20 years after I first picked up a club, and still dominating, is so special. I’ll tell my grandkids one day that I saw Tiger Woods in person.”

Sunday may be the last time they get to do so. I hope it isn’t. I want to be wrong. I want to look like a fool and Woods to announce next year that he’ll play the 2020 Australian Open at nearby Kingston Heath.

But it least today will be momentous. If Woods beats Ancer, his 27th match victory will take the outright Cup record.

“Wouldn’t that be the perfect bow to tie on his professional career in Australia?” Gough ponders.

Indeed it would. Here’s hoping the match goes all the way to the 18th.

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2019-12-14 10:23:29Z
CBMiTmh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmdvbGYuY29tL25ld3MvY29sdW1ucy8yMDE5LzEyLzE0L3RpZ2VyLXdvb2RzLWZhcmV3ZWxsLWF1c3RyYWxpYW5zL9IBUmh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmdvbGYuY29tL25ld3MvY29sdW1ucy8yMDE5LzEyLzE0L3RpZ2VyLXdvb2RzLWZhcmV3ZWxsLWF1c3RyYWxpYW5zL2FtcC8

Farewell, Tiger! Australia prepares to say goodbye to the U.S. playing captain for good - Golf.com

MELBOURNE, Australia – It’s time to address the Big Cat in the room. These words are difficult to write, especially for an Australian writer. But here goes…

The Sunday singles finale to the Presidents Cup is likely to be the last time Tiger Woods plays tournament golf in Australia.

Woods, the U.S. Team’s playing captain, will cap arguably the greatest edition in the 25-year history of this biennial contest with a match against International rookie Abraham Ancer. There is a good chance it will be the last time the golf world gets to see Woods, the artist, use Alister MacKenzie’s famed Royal Melbourne as his canvas. At least under the pressure of a tournament.


Why? For one thing, Woods missed out on automatic qualification for this year’s Cup. He was fortunate to have a self-pick up his sleeve and, thankfully, the choice was easy when he won a record-equalling 82nd PGA Tour title in Japan in late October. Gosh, we’re lucky he did — but there’s no guarantee he’ll do the same in the future.

The American team keeps getting replenished with studs like Patrick Cantlay and Xander Schauffele, rookies this week. In years to come, young guns like Matt Wolff and Collin Morikawa will fill out the team.

Secondly, the Presidents Cup won’t return to Australia until at least 2027, when Woods will be 51. The 2021 Cup is at Quail Hollow and TPC Harding Park in 2025 are the only confirmed venues. The 2023 edition is likely to be held in Asia.

It has been eight years since Woods played Down Under – when he was here for the 2011 Cup and Australian Open. It is getting harder and harder for Woods to make special trips to Australia with a PGA Tour schedule that encompasses nearly the entire calendar year. Finally, the Australian Open’s spot on the schedule — it’s usually held during the week of Thanksgiving in the U.S. — runs up against Woods’ Hero World Challenge held in the Bahamas in early December.

It’s heartbreaking to consider the possibility that Sunday at Royal Melbourne is Woods’ competitive swan song in Australia. The fans down here have relished every minute of the six trips he’s made. And hasn’t he been so glorious to watch this week?

Consider that beautifully-flighted, sawed-off short iron draw he threw into the 18th hole in Friday’s foursomes match. It left his club like a laser but landed like a butterfly with sore feet, setting Justin Thomas up for a birdie to win their match. The pair’s subsequent celebration will go down in Presidents Cup folklore.

Remember at the par-3 5th during Thursday’s four-ball, when the 15-time major winner hit a bump-and-run from a nasty lie between two greenside bunkers that dropped obediently into the hole for birdie? It was so exquisite that teammate Thomas had no issues with Woods channeling Jordan Spieth and telling his partner, “go get that!”

Those are just the two most recent additions to a long highlight reel of Woods on the Melbourne Sandbelt.

His obsession with the revered Aussie golf region began in 1997. The Californian made his first trip to Melbourne’s Sandbelt – his second to Australia after the 1996 Aus Open – to contest the Australian Masters at Huntingdale Golf Club. He tied for a respectable eighth.

That was in February – two months before he’d secure an historic win at another Masters. You know, the one at Augusta National.
Thousands of fans lined the fairways of Huntingdale to get a glimpse of the chosen one who they’d read about in magazines and newspapers — well before social media, of course.

They’d heard of his fearsome power, but Woods only hit one driver in the opening round. As a local reporter detailed at the time, “A graphic impression of the slightly built young man’s power was provided with almost every shot. At the par-5 14th, at 554 metres (605 yards) one of the longest in Australian tournament golf, Woods humbled the hole with a 3-wood and 2-iron.”

The fan stampede synonymous with Tigermania was in its infancy in 1997, but already annoying fellow pro golfers. In the same Aussie Masters, local pro Brett Ogle, himself a two-time PGA Tour winner, snapped to fans chasing Woods: “Tiger’s not the only one playing out here.”

Maybe not. But Woods is perhaps the only golfer who captures the imagination of Australians who don’t even play golf.

Woods’ next trip to the Sandbelt came in 1998, when in his Presidents Cup debut he demanded captain Jack Nicklaus send him out on Sunday face local star Greg Norman in the singles at Royal Melbourne. Woods beat the Shark on the 18th hole, but the International team secured their only Cup victory to date.

The pinnacle of Woods’ Sandbelt history came in 2009 when he picked apart the world-renowned Kingston Heath en route to a meaningful Australian Masters victory. Although his first appearance in Australia in 11 years cost the Victorian state government a reported $3 million, Woods justified the spend by wowing fans with beautifully-crafted golf shots while leading from start to finish. He added the now-defunct tournament’s gold jacket to the green jackets already in his wardrobe.

Ten years later, Aussie fans have jumped at the chance to see the reigning Masters champion tackle Royal Melbourne while in vintage form.

Among those in the crowd was Alex Gough, a New York-based Australian who made the 10,000-mile journey home from his Brooklyn residence just to see Woods. Gough, 32, has been a member of Royal Melbourne since 2008 and was on hand to witness Woods at the 2011 Cup.

But this time is different, says Gough.

“I was there in 2011 … it was cool, but Tiger hadn’t won in two years. This Presidents Cup has so much more pop in it with him playing so well.

“The way Tiger carves his irons around Royal Melbourne is so impressive. He knows exactly where to hit it and where to miss it.

“I went out and watched the (2001) WGC-Match Play at (nearby) Metropolitan GC as an introduction to golf. But Tiger was the catalyst for getting me out and taking up the sport.
Gough is just one of 30,000 fans who have been cramming in to Royal Melbourne each day to get a glimpse of Woods.

“To see him 20 years after I first picked up a club, and still dominating, is so special. I’ll tell my grandkids one day that I saw Tiger Woods in person.”

Sunday may be the last time they get to do so. I hope it isn’t. I want to be wrong. I want to look like a fool and Woods to announce next year that he’ll play the 2020 Australian Open at nearby Kingston Heath.

But it least today will be momentous. If Woods beats Ancer, his 27th match victory will take the outright Cup record.

“Wouldn’t that be the perfect bow to tie on his professional career in Australia?” Gough ponders.

It sure would. Let’s just hope the match goes all the way to the 18th.

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2019-12-14 10:18:45Z
CBMiTmh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmdvbGYuY29tL25ld3MvY29sdW1ucy8yMDE5LzEyLzE0L3RpZ2VyLXdvb2RzLWZhcmV3ZWxsLWF1c3RyYWxpYW5zL9IBUmh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmdvbGYuY29tL25ld3MvY29sdW1ucy8yMDE5LzEyLzE0L3RpZ2VyLXdvb2RzLWZhcmV3ZWxsLWF1c3RyYWxpYW5zL2FtcC8

Jumat, 13 Desember 2019

Rachel Noble to be Australia's first female intelligence chief - Al Jazeera English

Prime Minister Scott Morrison on Friday appointed Rachel Noble as the first woman to head a major Australian spy agency.

Noble will become next director-general of the Australian Signals Directorate (ASD), which intercepts electronic communications from foreign countries.

"Her appointment to this leadership role is a significant step forward for women in the national security sector and we congratulate her," Morrison and Minister for Defence Linda Reynolds said in a statement.

Noble, who will begin her new role in February 2020, will lead the ASD at a time when Australia is increasingly concerned about cyber-attacks.

She replaces Mike Burgess, who was appointed as the new director-general of the Australian Security Intelligence Organisation (ASIO).

In March, the ASD concluded that China’s Ministry of State Security was responsible for a cyber-attack on its parliament and three major political parties, Reuters reported.

Australia decided not to go public with its findings for fear of risking its trade ties with China, two sources said.

China denies it was responsible for the hack.

SOURCE: Al Jazeera and news agencies

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2019-12-13 05:45:00Z
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Selasa, 10 Desember 2019

Sydney choked by hazardous haze from Australia bush fires - The Associated Press

SYDNEY (AP) — Wildfires engulfed the Australian city of Sydney on Tuesday in haze so thick in some places it was 11 times worse than the level considered “hazardous,” and was apt to trigger fire alarms.

The city canceled ferries and some offices in the downtown area were evacuated.

Local health officials advised people to stay indoors as much as possible and those with heart and lung problems were told to avoid all outdoor activity.

“The smoke here in Sydney is extremely bad today, it is some of the worst air quality we’ve seen,” Richard Broome of New South Wales Health told reporters.

“We are just urging people once again to take these (conditions) seriously,” Broome said.

Ambulances have been answering dozens of respiratory-related calls a day, said the head of NSW Ambulance, Brent Armitage.

Sydney Trains warned that fire alarms at train stations might be set off by the thick smoke drifting into the city from fires ringing Sydney.

The regional environmental department said the air quality index, or AQI, in some parts of the city was more than 11 times the 200 reading considered hazardous.

Given the dire air quality, workers should not be forced to toil on outdoor job sites while the haze persists, said Unions NSW’s assistant secretary, Thomas Costa.

“Toxicity is very, very high,” Costa said.

Winds from the north were pushing the smoke into the city, overpowering coastal breezes. Forecasts showed the wind would likely clear the air somewhat but also will fan the brush fires.

Australia’s fire season normally peaks during the summer in the Southern Hemisphere. It started early this year after an unusually dry and warm winter. Last month, authorities reported more than 50 wildfires burning mainly in northern New South Wales.

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2019-12-10 06:21:20Z
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