Members, do you have a bird story you’d like to share?
Or hints and tips on [Read more...]
Members, do you have a bird story you’d like to share?
Or hints and tips on [Read more...]
On behalf of the members of the ABA Inc and as Patron of the Far North Queensland Birdbreeders Club, the secretary Barbara Devnie will be attending the Northern Avian Conference to be held in Charters Towers.
This is an annual event staged at different venues each long weekend in June.
The Cowra Poultry Club will be holding their Annual Show to be held In Cowra on the 22nd June. As Patron of the Club the Secretary, has been invited to attend.
Barbara Devnie
My workload appears to be increasing, its that time of year to re enter renewals and issue Insurance Certificates, not that I mind, it shows that the work done throughout the year is proving to pay dividends.
This “Communicator:” should provide interesting reading, the envelope contains more reading plus instructions needing pen to paper. The draft of our Voluntary Guidelines, please help with any changes etc. We will be putting this before the members for adoption at this years AGM.
Good news is that we are getting more members who have various problems asking for help proving that we are able to make a difference to the keeping and breeding of birds.
For instance over the last few days, phone calls from an unnamed person who has a rooster causing angst from neighbours. I suggested that as this was in the Ryde Council area he asks his relations in the bush. to take it before the council gets involved.
Another long saga, in WA, is a pigeon loft which has been in the same position for 17 yrs and with the same neighbor, she is hell bent that the loft be moved to comply with the new changes to the distances between the loft and the adjoining fence that being 9 meters!!!
On another success, but very welcome, Cowra Poultry Club we finally managed to get the Trustee’s to allow a sale to take place in the betting ring. Cold morning, no facilities for making hot drinks and as for the toilet facilities, we will leave that to your imagination
We are awaiting, with bated breath, correspondence to allow the end of May sale to be in the Poultry Pavilion with Clubs pens back in use after 4 years (imagine the cobwebs!)
Please note the NEW letter heading, we had received so many comments about the previous one that in order to suit ALL of our myriad species belonging to members, is a feather is which is common to all.
A forlorn hope from me, can members please get their respective “grey cells” working to produce interesting snippets for the next issue of the Communicator.
This would help both Bob and myself from “pulling our hair out prior to putting the Communicator to bed”.
Also, any comments, whether they be critical or even praise, would be very welcome.
Yours in Aviculture
Barbara Devnie
Along with food and petrol, birdseed prices are going to rise and stay high and volatile. This time it’s not drought driving increases but government policy. You might have heard about the food vs fuel debate. Europe and the US have put policies in place to mandate biofuel made from grain. Biofuels like ethanol are competing with food and feed grain for land-use and this is driving grain prices up. The Iemma government in NSW now wants to mandate E10, that is, enforce a 10 % ethanol blend in unleaded petrol. This policy will require 2.5 million tonne of wheat to meet demand. An ethanol plant is being built in Dalby on the Darling Downs in the heart of Australia’s main birdseed production area that will use 200,000 tonne of sorghum a year.
In the US corn for ethanol is going to chew through 120 million tonne of grain in 2008. The world only grows 2000 million tonne, which is not enough for what we currently need for food and livestock feed. The Yanks are using the world’s grain surplus to fuel their car culture. While they wreck world grain supplies, ethanol will only contribute 4% of their transport needs. Is it worth it?
World grain prices have doubled in the past year because of grain going into ethanol. Birdseed prices will go up as well. When farmers have a choice between growing different grains, the decision comes back to how much money they expect to get. When wheat or sorghum prices are high then farmers will not plant alternative crops like millet, canaryseed and sunflowers. With lower supply prices shoot up and we may have to keep importing birdseed to meet demand. In 2007 Australia imported Chinese, US and Argentine millet, Canadian and NZ canaryseed and Argentine sunflowers to cap prices and ensure demand was met. Imported seed means high prices, variable quality, sterilised seeds and the risks involved in getting grain through quarantine. Queensland has to bring grain in from NSW every year to meet demand for its feedlots and mills. Taking an extra 200,000 tonne out of supply can only drive prices higher and encourage farmers to grow sorghum instead of crops like millet and sunflowers.
You will be told by the spin doctors about all the good aspects of ethanol.
There is nothing good about ethanol.
Ethanol actually increases greenhouse gas emissions because of the fossil fuels needed to grow, process and distribute ethanol. Air quality is not improved. Our fuel security is no better because we can only make a tiny amount of the fuel we need. Australia’s average grain crop of 25 million tonne would not make enough fuel for NSW’s unleaded petrol let alone diesel or the demand from other states. We will still need a lot of fossil fuels to run the economy. Ask your mechanic about ethanol. You will find they are not convinced it won’t affect your car. Ask if the warranty on your car will still hold if you use ethanol, they aren’t sure.
The only thing about ethanol that may be of benefit is that it will help rural development. Put another way, taxpayers will provide the money to fund a subsidised industry in the bush. So you pay tax to subsidise an industry whose existence forces food prices up, so extra tax is the first slug. Food prices go up and you pay again at the supermarket. If you breed birds, you then get to pay a third time when birdseed prices rise.
Ethanol can not stand on its own as a business. Ethanol producers need government support. In NSW the biggest ethanol producer is the Manildra Group. Manildra was found to be the highest undeclared donor to the NSW Labor Party before the 2007 election with undeclared donations over $500,000. Ethanol advocates like Member for … Tony Windsor received $50,000 from Manildra. After the election the NSW government announced the intention to introduce an E10 policy even when their taskforce reported they should take a wait and see approach.
In the past Manildra gave a lot of money to the Howard government. In 2002-3 the figure was over $300,000 and that was the year that the government put an excise on imported Brazilian ethanol of 38c/l while a boatload was coming over! It cost the importer over $1million and presumably kept Manildra happy. Money well spent. So when governments talk about rural development they actually mean helping out the generous donors to their party. Whether the community benefits is another point. Ethanol plants don’t employ many people, and given that many rural industries are looking for workers (the NFF reckons the country is short about 100,000 farm workers), it is a pointless exercise anyway. So bird-breeders and fanciers pay three times over to subsidise ethanol, an industry which only exists to benefit political parties and their donors.
Don’t pay three times over to support this industry. Let’s at least have a level playing field so that birdseed prices are not kept artificially high by having to compete with subsidised industries! Fair Go Mr Iemma.
Protest to your local member, petition the Premier, write to the Federal government, write to your local paper and spread the word. Ethanol is bad policy.
thepremier@www.nsw.gov.au or phone 02-92285239
For more information about ethanol see:-
Time Magazine ‘The Clean Energy Scam’
http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,1725975,00.html
Or Online Opinion http://www.onlineopinion.com.au/view.asp?article=7115
If you keep, trade or breed exotic (non-native) birds in Australia there are some important things you need to know.
The Australian Government Department of the Environment, Water, Heritage and the Arts regulates international trade in exotic birds in order to:
Bird keepers who possess exotic birds must be able to prove the legal origin of their birds. The Australian Government has introduced a record keeping scheme to help bird keepers comply with this.
Members, do you have a bird story you'd like to share? Or hints and tips on … [Read More...]
Membership of the Associated Birdkeepers of Australia Inc is open to private individuals, bird clubs, societies and bird related businesses who understand and support the Aims and Objectives of the ABA Inc. … [ MORE ]
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