
Sea levels are rising, apparently. We should be closer to the beach in time for summer!
This is actually a map showing forecast of above average rain for this winter due to La nina and the Idian Ocean Dipole.
In Narrabri, we have always supported our Schools Ministry through the churches. After all, the Government giveth and the Government taketh away. It is absolutely no surprise that within weeks of gaining power Labor want to remove school chaplains.
From news.com.au
The federal Education Minister is moving to dump one key component of a scheme in place at schools across the country.
Supplied video obtained Tuesday, May 8, 2018 of Treasurer Scott Morrison, delivering his 2018 budget speech at Canberra’s Parliament House.
The Albanese Labor government is moving to dump the compulsory religious element of the national school chaplaincy program.
Federal Education Minister Jason Clare said the major change was aimed at giving schools greater choice around pastoral care.
The voluntary scheme supports more than 3000 school communities across Australia.
“The government will open up the program to give schools the option to choose either a chaplain or a professionally qualified student welfare officer,” Mr Clare told NCA NewsWire.
“We believe that principals and school communities are best placed to understand their students’ needs, so we will give schools a choice about the services they need and the staff they hire.”
The $60m-a-year school chaplaincy program was introduced under the Howard government.
Its religious streak has been a point of contention ever since.
Australian Education Union boss Correna Haythorpe welcomed the news.
“Public schools are no place for religious proselytising and instruction,” she said.
“The AEU has always said that students and families who need support should be able to access evidence-based mental health, social and wellbeing assistance from qualified professionals.”
Scripture
The Lord was with the people of Judah, and they took possession of the hill country. But they failed to drive out the people living in the plains, who had iron chariots.
Observation
As the people advanced into the countryside, The tribes had varying levels of success in driving out the prior inhabitants. For some of the tribes, they could take some of the land, not all of it. For others, the best they could do is take the Canaanites as slaves.
The worst was the tribe of Dan, who were confined to the hill country and were not allowed onto the plains. Later, when they grew more numerous, they were able to take the Amorites as slaves.
Application
The Lord had promised the land of Israel to His people. They had been instructed to kill all the inhabitants of the land. Yet, they were unable or unwilling to do this, and the pagan customs of these people would be a stumbling block for the Israelites for generations to come.
The gift of the land was both a promise and a task. It was given to them by the Lord, but they had to take possession of it.
In the same way, our maturity as disciples is both grace and responsibility. The Holy Spirit gives us the ability to be holy people, but we also have to repent, or turn away from, our sins.
God gives us the land, but we have to destroy the inhabitants. We have the promise of holiness, but we have to choose God’s way.
This is a lifelong battle, but the rewards go beyond this life and into eternity.
Prayer
Thank you, Holy Spirit, for making it possible for me to live without sin. Please help me to dedicate myself to you each and every day. Amen.
Someone needs to tell the Australian Energy Minister the bad news about batteries
Climate Change and Energy Minister Chris Bowen says we just need more renewables and more storage:
Bowen says we can store water, we should be able to store power
“You can say the wind doesn’t always blow and the sun doesn’t always shine. Well, the rain doesn’t always fall either but we managed to store the water,” Bowen said.
He doesn’t seem to realize that electrons won’t politely sit in a shoe box waiting for the day they run your toaster. When South Australia got the worlds biggest battery in 2017 everyone got excited but few realized it would only power the state for two whole minutes before it ran out. South Australia is just 6% of the total National Energy Market, but if we were trying to make it truly 100% renewable with a reasonable battery backup Paul Miskelly and Tom Quirk calculated we’d need 7.5 million tonnes of lead acid batteries and a spare $60 to $90 billion dollars.
In a recent “record winning moment” in solar and battery powered excitement one of the smallest and sunniest towns in Australia made headlines when it managed to run off 100% solar and battery power for a whole 80 minutes. Onslow is a metropolis of 847 people. As I said at the time, we’re only 520,000 minutes short of a year.
Last year one new Tesla Megabattery in Victoria caught fire soon after it started operating. Since it took 76 hours to stop the fire we can honestly say it burned for three times longer than it provided electricity.
Storage can be more than batteries, but we’re already spending $10 billion plus on Snowy Hydro 2.0 — the giant renewables-storage scheme that will waste 20-30% of the renewable energy fed into it so we can make a non-despatchable generator into a partly-despatchable one.
Hydrogen is hardly the answer. As David Archibald says it’s is such a reactive gas that there is no source of it in nature. The only naturally occurring hydrogen is the flammable part of farts. Otherwise, the cheapest way of making hydrogen is a water shift reaction with natural gas. But about 60% of the energy contained by the natural gas is wasted in the process — if you just wanted a source of energy, obviously, you’d use the natural gas.
As a fuel, hydrogen has some big shortcomings. It’s has low energy density, so a big, high-pressure tank of the stuff doesn’t take you far. It has an explosive range in air of 18% to 60%. It causes embrittlement of steel. There is a plot at the moment to add hydrogen to the natural gas distribution system — which then might start leaking like a sieve. It has a colourless flame, so leaks that have caught fire can’t be seen. In the days before infrared cameras, workers at a rocket fuel factory in Texas used to detect hydrogen leaks by walking with a straw broom in front of them. When the broom caught fire they had found the leak.
— DAvid Archibald
There’s more information on why Hydrogen is not the answer either here, thanks To Rafe Champion.
Like a third world nation we’re rationing electricity in winter:
Last night hospitals were ordered to reduce electricity use and millions of people urged not to use basic appliances.
The potential for mass blackouts has increased with about 1800MW of coal-fired power not operating in Queensland and 1200MW of capacity offline in the states of NSW, Victoria, South Australia and Tasmania.
The Tomago aluminium smelter in NSW, the country’s biggest electricity user, was also forced to cut production to reduce the chance of a blackout.
Read the article here
Another beautiful winter morning!

Australia is now reaping the fruit of the Green madness, and will continue to do so for at least the next decade, or longer if we pursue the Net Zero madness.
Last night, NSW was warned about a potential power shortage from 6 pm to 8 pm. Rolling blackouts were a possibility, we were told.
We dodged the proverbial bullet last night, but it could be on again tonight. If not tonight, then maybe next week. We are only two weeks into winter, and this is where we have got to. Then there is the next peak season, called summer.
The solution to this situation, we are told is more solar and wind power. Solar power will not make a scrap of difference in the evening peak in winter, because it is dark. Here in Narrabri for the last few days it has been very calm, so not much wind power either.
For the last 20 years, successive Governments have been telling us that we have to move away from “fossil fuels” for our power generation. The result is that generator companies have taken the hint and not invested in maintaining or upgrading their facilities. So, over the next few years, coal-powered electricity will virtually disappear from Australia. Ironic, when we have so much “clean” coal in this country that we are sending overseas.
At the same time, the same Governments have been telling us that gas is a good “transition” power source. It is true that gas generators are more responsive to demand and gas produces more energy per tonne of CO2 emitted. But, these Governments have also prevented the gas companies from extracting coal seam gas from most of the country.
So at the time when we most need natural gas as a backup for our electricity grid, there is a huge shortage because of Government policies. The world price of natural gas is high because of the Russia- Ukraine war, and we have lakes of it underground just waiting to be tapped.
Now we have this crazy situation where the electricity regulator has imposed a price cap on wholesale electricity of $300/MW hr (The price used to be about $30, that is how bad things have got). At this price natural gas power generators cannot make a profit, so they don’t want to operate. We have a couple of coal-fired generators under maintenance that was delayed, because there is no point in spending too much on them when they will close in a couple of years anyway.
This is where following the policies demanded by green activists gets you to. The next few years are going to be worse as we close down coal. When electric cars become a significant part of the vehicle fleet, the demand for electricity will be double what it is now.
It is actually worse than that, when you consider how people live. You get home from work, what do you do? Plug your car in, turn the heater or air conditioner on (full blast at first because you’ve been out all day), put the kettle on, then turn on the stove to cook dinner.
That time from 6 pm to 8 pm, when the sun has gone down and the wind is usually calm will for ever be a tight wire act for our power system.
Welcome to our brave new future of Net Zero.
While sex may be presented today as little more than a recreational activity, sexuality is presented as that which lies at the very heart of what it means to be an authentic person. That is a profound claim that is arguably unprecedented in history. Carl Trueman

Scripture
When the men of Judah attacked, the Lord gave them victory over the Canaanites and the Perezites, and they killed 10,000 enemy warriors at the town of Bezek.
Observation
After the death of Joshua, the Israelites ask the Lord which tribe should attack the Canaanites. The Lord tells them Judah, and that He has already given them victory.
So the men of Judah, assisted by the tribe of Simeon, take on the Canaanites and the Perezites, killing 10,000 warriors at the town of Bezek.
The fighters from Judah destroy many towns and their inhabitants, conquering and controlling much of the land.
Application
It is clear from this passage that the people of Israel were dependant on God for their land. When they followed God’s battle plans, they had victory. When they try to do it in their own ability and their own wisdom, they failed miserably.
We are fighting in a battle for control of the territory that the Lord has assigned to us. Satan is constantly trying to intimidate us so that he can kill, steal, and destroy all that God has for us.
We have to fight this war on God’s terms and not our own. The weapons of our warfare are not fleshly, they are spiritual.
When we trust God and walk in his ways, then the battle and the victory belong to the Lord.
Prayer
Lord, I thank you that you are greater than the enemy. Please help me to align my ways with your plans for me. Amen.
Pulled up a bit short as my body was not very co-operative. A good ride though.

The task of the Christian is not to whine about the moment in which he or she lives but to understand its problems and respond appropriately to them. Carl Trueman
