Factbox: Winners and losers in the U.S. financial bill

(Reuters) – U.S. lawmakers are close to finalizing legislation that will overhaul the country’s financial system and usher in new rules for Wall Street.

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A joint House of Representatives and Senate committee approved a bank regulation bill that lawmakers expect to pass each chamber separately in the coming days. It will then be ready for U.S. President Barack Obama to sign into law, possibly by July 4.

Below are some of the likely winners and losers under the regulation bill.

CREDIT RATING AGENCIES – WIN AND LOSE

* Credit rating agencies — such as Moody’s Corp, Standard & Poor’s and Fitch Ratings — will be subject to greater liability.

* Rating agencies could be sued if they “recklessly” failed to review key information in developing a rating.

* The Securities and Exchange Commission will be given two years to find a way to mitigate conflicts of interests at the biggest rating agencies, Moody’s, S&P and Fitch, which are paid by the issuers whose debt they rate. The two years give the agencies breathing space but if the SEC does not find a solution, the regulator is required to implement a proposal by Senator Al Franken and create a board to match rating agencies with debt issuers.

* Federal regulators will be required to remove references to credit rating in their rules in an effort to reduce reliance on the credit rating agencies.

LARGE FINANCIAL FIRMS – WIN AND LOSE

* Large financial firms such as Bank of America and Goldman Sachs will be prohibited from proprietary trading and only be allowed to make minimum investments in hedge funds and private equity funds.

* Large firms will also face tougher standards in what qualifies for capital they are required to set aside to ensure that they do not threaten the stability of the financial system.

* Banks such as Goldman and JPMorgan Chase will be forced to spin off some of their profitable derivatives business or risk losing access to the Federal Reserve’s emergency funds. But banks’ biggest volume instruments such as foreign exchange and interest rate swaps will still be allowed to be traded by banks.

* The firms’ financial products such as mortgages and credit cards will be subjected to new rules from a newly created bureau designed to protect customers from risky products.

* Most derivatives will be forced on to exchanges or through clearinghouses, in an attempt to limit the effect that large, risky trades can have on the economy, another factor that could curb bank profits. Non-financial players such as manufacturers, however, would be exempt.

SMALL BANKS – WIN

* The Federal Reserve will continue supervising small banks. Small banks wanted to maintain a supervisory structure they were familiar with.

* Banking regulators will be the primary regulator to enforce rules for small banks’ financial products. The new consumer financial regulator will provide backup enforcement.

U.S. FEDERAL RESERVE – WIN

* Gains powers to supervise systemically important financial firms.

* Retains authority to supervise banks of all sizes.

* Part of a “risk council” that will have authority to monitor risk in the financial system and decide whether a large complex company needs to divest assets.

* Becomes home for the new Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. Will have power along with other regulators to appeal consumer protection bureau’s rules if deemed to undermine stability of financial system or banks’ deposits.

* The Fed escaped congressional reviews of its monetary policy but will be subject to reviews of its emergency lending and open market activities.

* Democrats and Republicans originally wanted to strip the Fed of its powers to supervise banks and confine the central bank to setting monetary policy and acting as the lender of last resort.

CONSUMERS – WIN

* New rules to protect consumers from risky financial products could only be overturned by banking regulators if banking regulators believe the rules could threaten the financial system or banks’ deposits.

* The new consumer regulator will be housed in the Federal Reserve, which has been criticized for failing to rein in the risky lending that contributed to the financial crisis.

* The consumer regulator will get funding from the Fed and would get the authority to request more funds from Congress.

* The consumer regulator will be able to write its own rules for a slew of products such as mortgages and credit cards and enforce those rules.

INVESTORS/SHAREHOLDERS – WIN AND LOSE

* Broker-dealers who provide financial advice will not immediately be required to have fiduciary duties, which would require them to act in their clients best interests. The SEC must first study the issue for six months and then would have authority to impose those duties on brokers if the regulator determines they are necessary.

* Publicly-traded companies will be required to ask their shareholders whether they want a non binding vote on executive pay annually, once every two years or once every three years. Originally, Democrats wanted to give shareholders an annual say on executive pay.

* The SEC will have the authority to give shareholders and easier and cheaper way to nominate corporate board directors.

* The Municipal Securities Rulemaking Board will be required to impose fiduciary duties on municipal bond advisers.

AUTO DEALERS – WIN

Auto dealers that do financing will be exempt from oversight by the new consumer bureau, and stay within the jurisdiction of the Federal Trade Commission.

PRIVATE POOLS OF CAPITAL – WIN

* Advisers to hedge funds and private equity funds with more than $150 million in assets will be required to register with the SEC. Venture capital funds will be exempt.

CLEARINGHOUSES – WIN

* Derivatives clearinghouses will be able to borrow in emergencies from the Federal Reserve, as long as the systemic risk council, a majority of Fed governors and the Treasury Secretary decide it is necessary.

LAW FIRMS – WIN

* Regulators like the Commodity Futures Trading Commission and Securities and Exchange Commission will have scores of rules to write in coming months to implement the legislation, meaning lots of billable hours for law firms and consultants advising clients on how to respond to proposed rules.

CFTC/SEC – WIN

* The CFTC and SEC will gain new authority to regulate the $615 trillion over-the-counter derivatives market.

* The SEC will win power to oversee the hedge fund industry.

(Reporting by Charles Abbott, Kim Dixon, Roberta Rampton, Rachelle Younglai; additional reporting by Ann Saphir in Chicago; editing by Anthony Boadle)

U.S. says new sanctions on Iran could impact Pakistan

(Reuters) – Pakistan should be wary of committing to an Iran-Pakistan natural gas pipeline because anticipated U.S. sanctions on Iran could hit Pakistani companies, the U.S. special representative to the region said on Sunday. While sympathetic to Pakistan’s energy needs, the U.S. special representative to the region, Richard Holbrooke, told reporters that new legislation, which targets Iran’s energy sector, is being drafted in the U.S. Congress and that Pakistan should “wait and see.”

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“Pakistan has an obvious, major energy problem and we are sympathetic to that, but in regards to a specific project, legislation is being prepared that may apply to the project,” he said, referring to the pipeline. “We caution the Pakistanis not to over-commit themselves until we know the legislation.” Pakistan is plagued by chronic electricity shortages that have led to mass demonstrations and battered the politically shaky government of President Asif Ali Zardari.

U.S. Senator Joseph Lieberman said last week he expects Congress to finish shortly legislation tightening U.S. sanctions on Iran that will include provisions affecting the supply of refined petroleum products to Tehran, and add to sanctions on its financial sector.

Lieberman, an independent, is a member of a House-Senate committee of negotiators working on final details of the bill and said it could pass by July 4.

The $7.6 billion natural gas pipeline deal, signed in March, doesn’t directly deal with refined petroleum products and was hailed in both Iran and Pakistan as highly beneficial.

The U.S. has so far been muted in its criticism of the deal, balancing its need to support Pakistan, a vital but unstable ally in the global war against al Qaeda, with its desire to isolate Iran.

But the legislation could be comprehensive enough to have major implications for Pakistani companies, Holbrooke said.

“We caution Pakistan to wait and see what the legislation is.”

This was Holbrooke’s tenth trip to Pakistan since President Barack Obama appointed him special representative to the region. His visit followed a series of working groups this week that are part of the U.S.-Pakistan strategic dialogue, which both countries say will lay the groundwork for a new relationship.

Afghanistan was on the agenda in meetings with the Pakistani leadership, Holbrooke said, including talks on a Pakistani role in talks between the Afghan Taliban and the Kabul government.

But the United States would not support Pakistan pushing the Haqqani network, one of the strongest factions of the Afghan insurgency and mostly based in Pakistan’s North Waziristan, into talks with Kabul as Washington sees the group as intransigent, brutal and too tightly allied with al Qaeda.

The United States has said any groups wishing to lay down their weapons must renounced al Qaeda and agree to participate peacefully in the Afghan political process.

“It’s just hard to see that happening,” Holbrooke said of the Haqqani network.

Regardless of what happens in Afghanistan, he said, the United States would remain engaged with Pakistan.

“Pakistan matters in and of itself. Whatever happens in Afghanistan, the U.S. cannot turn away from Pakistan again,” he said. “We are not going to repeat the mistakes that occurred – at least not on our watch — of the last 20 years.”

Repeal of U.S. military gay ban clears Senate panel

A key Senate committee took a step on Thursday toward repealing a ban on gays and lesbians serving openly in the U.S. military, a goal championed by President Barack Obama.

On a 16-12 vote, the committee approved legislation aimed at ending the Clinton-era “don’t ask, don’t tell” policy that allows homosexuals to serve in secret but expels them if their sexual orientation becomes known.

The House of Representatives was expected to vote on a similar proposal later on Thursday or Friday, and there are still several more legislative steps before the change can become law.

Even if Congress gives final approval to such legislation, repeal would require certification from Obama, Defense Secretary Robert Gates and the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Admiral Mike Mullen, that the new law would not have a negative impact on readiness, unit cohesion, recruitment and troop retention.

The Pentagon is to complete a review on how to implement the repeal by Dec. 1.

Repealing the 17-year-old ban would be a major victory for Obama and for gay rights advocates who supported his 2008 presidential campaign.

But it is also a political issue that has long divided the U.S. military. Opposition Republicans, gearing up for congressional elections in November in which they are expected to make gains, accused Obama of using the U.S. armed forces to engage in a “social experiment.”

“Is this the sort of thing that George Washington or our founders would be proud of?” asked Republican Representative Todd Akin in a House debate. “I will not betray my children or our armed services people just for mere politics.”

Republicans criticized Obama’s Democrats for failing to wait until completion of the Pentagon study.

“We’re dissing the troops, that’s what we’re doing. We’re disrespecting them,” said Representative Howard McKeon, the ranking Republican on the House Armed Services Committee.

Recent polls show most Americans support the repeal of the 1993 ban, but opponents fear it could increase strain on a military already stretched by wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.

Sen. John McCain, Obama’s challenger in the 2008 election, distributed copies of letters from the heads of the U.S. Army, Navy, Air Force and Marines saying they had wanted Congress to wait until the Pentagon completed its study.

But Gates and Mullen have backed the measure because of compromise language that gives the military flexibility as to when the repeal is implemented.

(Reporting by Thomas Ferraro; writing by Phil Stewart and Susan Cornwell; editing by Mohammad Zargham)

Sean Penn urges help for Haiti hospitals

London, May 21 (ANI): Sean Penn has called for more assistance at hospitals in Haiti to help the earthquake-ravaged nation deal with the upcoming hurricane season next month.

The ‘Milk’ star has been constantly on the lookout to ensure that the devastated people’s nation receives all the help they can get following the tremor, which killed hundreds of thousands of citizens in January this year.

Penn drew U.S. Senate committee’s attention towards the healthcare Haiti needs on an immediate basis, as several hospital have been closed down – and he fears the nation will be overrun with emergencies once hurricane season begins.

“In many cases, the bureaucracy of international aid is protecting people to death. I come here today in the hope that we will address with bold clarity the razor”s edge upon which Haiti lies,” The Daily Express quoted him as saying. (ANI)

U.S. Senate panel approves money for Afghan, Iraq wars

A U.S. Senate committee on Thursday approved another $33.5 billion for the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq this year, although some members said they did so reluctantly.

The action by the Senate Appropriations Committee is the first step toward congressional approval of the extra war spending that President Barack Obama requested in February to support his surge of 30,000 more U.S. troops into Afghanistan.

But the money still must be approved by the full Senate and also by the House of Representatives, where the majority Democrats are split over the wisdom of continuing the wars.

The Senate panel unanimously approved $33.5 billion for the Pentagon for the two wars and a little under $4 billion for the State Department to help fund a “civilian stabilization strategy” to deliver more economic aid to Afghanistan as well as neighbouring Pakistan.

Chairman Daniel Inouye said he hoped the Senate would act on the legislation by the end of May. The money comes on top of about $130 billion that Congress already approved for the Afghanistan and Iraq wars through Sept. 30 of this year.

Senator Barbara Mikulski said she had “grave questions” about spending so much in Afghanistan given that its president is “running the second-most corrupt country in the world.”

While U.S. troops are fighting in Afghanistan, “the Chinese are building railroads and buying up mining interests” there, Mikulski added. But she voted for the bill.

Senator Patrick Leahy, another Democrat, echoed her concerns.

“Every cent we’ve been spending in Iraq and Afghanistan, we’ve been borrowing from others, particularly the Chinese,” he said. “It’s very, very hard to justify some of the spending for either place.”

In addition to fully funding Obama’s troop surge for Afghanistan, the Pentagon funds included money to help train and equip Afghan and Iraqi security forces — $2.6 billion and $1 billion, respectively.

It also included $1.1 billion for mine-resistant vehicles known as MRAPs.

The appropriations committee added money for other projects to the bill, including:

– $13 billion for benefits for Vietnam War veterans who were exposed to Agent Orange.

– $2.8 billion requested by the Obama administration for relief and reconstruction for Haiti after its devastating earthquake on Jan. 12.

– $5.1 billion for the Federal Emergency Management Agency. “Everyone should be advised that the … agency is out of funding for disaster relief,” Inouye said.

– $400 million for relief from recent floods from Tennessee to Rhode island.

– $68 million to help address the impact of the massive oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico. (Editing by John O’Callaghan)

First man on the moon Armstrong says Obama is ”poorly advised” on space

Washington, May 13 (ANI): Appearing before the Senate Committee on Commerce, Science and Transportation here, Neil Armstrong, the first man to walk on the moon (in 1969), has said that President Barack Obama is “poorly advised” on space matters.

Armstrong said the Obama administration’s plan to end the Constellation program and cut other space efforts appeared to be made without input from NASA or the president”s science adviser.

“I have yet to find a person in NASA, the Defense Department, the Air Force, the National Academies, industry, or academia that had any knowledge of the plan prior to its announcement,” the Apollo 11 commander told the committee, according to Politico.

Armstrong said the United States “has invested substantially for more than half a century to acquire a position of leadership in space” but that “to maintain a leadership position requires steadfast determination and a continuing investment in the future.”

He added: “If the leadership we have acquired through our investment is allowed simply to fade away, other nations will surely step in where we have faltered. I do not believe that this would be in our best interests.” (ANI)

PM refuses to front insulation inquiry

Prime Minister Kevin Rudd says he will not appear before a Senate inquiry into the scrapped home insulation program.

A Senate committee is trying to establish what went wrong with the $2.45 billion scheme which was axed after it was linked to the deaths of installers, house fires and allegations of rorting.

The committee has asked Mr Rudd, the minister formerly responsible for the scheme Peter Garrett, the new minister responsible Greg Combet, and Employment Participation Minister Mark Arbib to appear. They have all refused.

Mr Rudd’s office says Question Time is the appropriate place for ministers to answer questions on the issue.

“That is the place to question ministers, not stunts like the Opposition’s party-political inquiry,” a spokesman for Mr Rudd said.

Liberal Senator Mary Jo Fisher, who chairs the environment references committee, says the response “gets a laugh out loud from the committee chairwoman”.

“The Australian people would find that response … offensive,” Senator Fisher said.

“It is dismissive of the fraud, the fires, the accidents, the fatalities that have happened.”

Senator Fisher says the Coalition-dominated committee has not been able to get satisfactory answers from bureaucrats so they wanted to go straight to the top.

The committee would consider its options after Mr Rudd and the ministers refused to appear, she said.

Opposition environment spokesman Greg Hunt says the Prime Minister should appear before the Senate inquiry.

“This is not like any other government failure of the last 30 years, there has been a huge human impact,” Mr Hunt said.

“The Prime Minister should appear to explain what the Government knew and why they made the decisions and why they ignored the warnings.”

FACTBOX-Major U.S. financial regulation reform proposals

WASHINGTON, April 14 (Reuters) – President Barack Obama and U.S. congressional leaders were scheduled to meet on Wednesday as the Senate moves closer to a decision on a bill that would tighten the regulatory screws on banks and capital markets following the 2008-2009 financial meltdown.

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Potentially changing the financial services industry for decades to come, the Democratic legislation was expected to come to a final vote in the Senate within weeks. Approval was considered likely by analysts, but not absolutely certain.

Republicans are still trying to water down or kill the bill, which won Senate committee approval last month in a party-line vote. The House of Representatives approved a bill in December. It would have to be merged with whatever the Senate produces before a final measure could go to Obama to be signed into law. Analysts say that could happen by mid-year.

Below are snapshots of the major reform proposals.

PREVENTING MORE BAILOUTS

* Objective: Lawmakers want to squash the idea that some financial firms are “too big to fail” and avert anymore bailouts like AIG’s (AIG.N) and Citigroup’s (C.N).

But they also want to prevent the potential for disaster that can come from refusing to bail out troubled firms, as the Bush administration did in 2008 with Lehman Brothers. Its subsequent collapse froze capital markets worldwide.

Seeking a middle ground between bailout and bankruptcy, the Senate bill sets up a new process for “orderly liquidation” of large firms that get into trouble. Authorities could seize distressed firms and dismantle them. The Senate bill creates a $50-billion fund to finance such actions. Large firms with assets above $50 billion would pay into the fund.

Republicans object to parts of the bill that would let the fund borrow more money from the U.S. Treasury if needed. These provisions, as well as others involving the Federal Reserve, smell like “backdoor bailouts,” the Republicans say.

* House-Senate dynamic: The House bill, like the Senate’s, sets up a new liquidation process, but it would be simpler to invoke and it would come with a higher price-tag.

The House proposes a $200-billion fund. Firms with assets over $50 billion would pay up to $150 billion into the fund, which could borrow another $50 billion from the Treasury.

* Winners and losers: If the new strategy works, the economy will be better protected from damaging financial sector crises that have erupted regularly since the 1980s.

Large financial firms will almost certainly take a hit on this proposal by having to pay substantial fees.

Some Republicans — working closely with Wall Street lobbyists to block and weaken reforms — want to kill the liquidation fund idea entirely, but that looks unlikely.

There is wide, bipartisan support for a new process to prevent future AIG-style debacles. Someone will have to pay for it. With congressional elections set for November, it probably won’t be taxpayers.

PROTECTING CONSUMERS

* Objective: Democrats want to put a stop to abusive home mortgages and deceptive credit cards.

The Senate bill creates a financial consumer protection bureau inside the Federal Reserve to regulate such products, which are now overseen inadequately by several regulators.

Obama and many Democrats want the watchdog to be an independent agency, with more power than a Fed unit would have. The struggle over this proposal will play out in weeks ahead.

House-Senate dynamic: The House bill included the White House proposal for an independent agency. The Senate bill puts the watchdog in the Fed to appease anti-watchdog Republicans.

The House bill exempted many businesses from the watchdog’s oversight. The Senate bill has fewer outright exemptions.

Winners and losers: If the bill is enacted, consumers can expect stronger protections. Credit card firms, mortgage lenders and payday loan companies all face a tougher regulatory regime ahead, regardless of where the watchdog is situated.

VOLCKER RULE

* Objective: Obama wants to ban risky trading unrelated to customers’ needs at banks that enjoy a competitive edge in the market because they have some form of taxpayer support.

The president proposed a ban on such proprietary trading in January with adviser Paul Volcker, a former Federal Reserve Board chairman, at his side. The so-called “Volcker rule” may become law, but probably not as written.

Provisions embodying the Volcker rule are in the Senate bill, but it leaves the door open to regulators watering down or invalidating the rule later. Separate legislation in the Senate takes a tougher approach.

* House-Senate dynamic: The Volcker rule is not in the House bill, which was approved before Obama unveiled the rule.

* Winners and losers: Too soon to say. Volcker, a widely respected economic sage, says enacting his rule would help head off the next financial crisis. Large financial firms could lose a major profit center if the rule becomes law, but the Senate bill as written falls well short of making that a certainty.

OVER-THE-COUNTER DERIVATIVES

* Objective: The unpoliced, $450-trillion over-the-counter derivatives market was a hothouse for risk during the boom years that greatly amplified the crisis when it finally hit.

The Senate bill would impose a new set of rules along the lines of those sought by Obama. He wants to force as much OTC derivatives traffic as possible through exchanges, equivalent electronic trading platforms and central clearinghouses.

* House-Senate dynamic: The two bills are closely similar, although the House exempts a wider range of end users of financial contracts from mandatory central clearing. The issue is further complicated by the involvement of the House and Senate agriculture committees, which have their own bills.

* Winners and losers. A handful of Wall Street mega-firms — Goldman Sachs (GS.N), JPMorgan Chase (JPM.N), Citi, Bank of America and Morgan Stanley (MS.N) — dominate the market. The substantial profits they reap from it could be reduced if more transparency and accountability impinged on their franchise.

SYSTEMIC RISK

* Objective: Lawmakers want some sort of new entity that can spot and head off the next crisis — something that existing regulators have failed repeatedly to do.

The Senate bill would set up a nine-member council of regulators, chaired by the Treasury secretary.

* House-Senate dynamic: The House bill proposes an inter-agency council chaired by the Treasury, as well, but gives the Fed a bigger role as chief policy agent.

* Winners and losers: Big banks and financial firms would be forced into a tighter regulatory straitjacket than their mid-sized and small rivals under Congress’ proposals.

POLICING BANKS

* Objective: The jigsaw-puzzle of the U.S. bank supervision system let problems fester in the cracks. But efforts to fix it have lost headway amid resistance from turf-protecting agencies and bank lobbyists keen to preserve the status quo.

The Senate bill would let the Fed keep oversight of large bank holding companies with assets over $50 billion. That would cover about 44 major firms, including giants already under the Fed, such as Citigroup and Bank of America (BAC.N).

The Fed would lose authority over state banks with less than $50 billion in assets, under the Senate bill.

Those banks would shift to the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp, which would be in charge of all state banks and thrifts, as well as holding companies of state banks under $50 billion.

National banks with assets below $50 billion would be under the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, which would also absorb the Office of Thrift Supervision, which would close.

* House-Senate dynamic. The House bill preserved the Fed’s and the FDIC’s bank supervision roles intact.

* Winners and losers. OTS will close. Both the House and Senate bills call for it. Aside from that, banks would lose the ability to shop around for the weakest regulator. (Reporting by Kevin Drawbaugh; Editing by Eric Beech)

Wood blocked from airing nuke dump views

Independent MLA Gerry Wood says he has been silenced by the Senate Committee examining a proposed nuclear waste facility in the Northern Territory.

Mr Wood says he was told he cannot speak at today’s hearing in Darwin because he failed to supply a written submission.

He says he made oral submissions at both the Canberra and Alice Springs hearings and was not previously required to register in writing.

“It just appears to me as though this inquiry has decided to invite a select number of people and silence anyone else that really wants to speak,” he said.

He believes he’s been barred from participating in Darwin because he disagreed with Senator Crossin at previous hearings.

“I would have thought that for the benefit of giving more than one side of the story it would have been good to hear another point of view,” he said.

Senator Trish Crossin says all speakers are required to make their intentions known to the Committee.

“We have no submission from Gerry Wood,” she said.

“Certainly not had a phone call from him and so it is not possible for a Senate Committee to plan and conduct its work if we don’t hear from potential witnesses.”

Traditional owners of the site proposed for a nuclear waste dump near Tennant Creek are today expected to tell the Senate Inquiry that their opposition was ignored when the site was nominated.

Elders from each of the five families from Muckaty Station will attend the inquiry, which will examine the suitability of the site, which was nominated by the Northern Land Council.

A spokeswoman for the group, Dianne Stokes, says she will reaffirm her people’s claim to the land.

“I’m coming here to reply to all the information … talk back to these people to what they said at the Senate Inquiry meeting up in Canberra,” she said.

“I want to tell them what I heard, it’s not true.”

Wild Rivers review nears end

A Senate committee reviewing Queensland’s Wild Rivers legislation will conduct its final public hearing in Cairns, in the state’s far north, next week.

The review was prompted by a private member’s bill challenging constitutional and other aspects of the Queensland legislation.

Twenty-nine formal submissions have been received and the committee is due to report in mid-May.

Long term radiation from possible dump needs attention

The deputy chair of the Senate committee examining the proposed national nuclear waste dump near Tennant Creek says the management of long-term radiation needs more attention.

The Australian Radiation Protection and Nuclear Agency made a submission about the need to carefully consider radiation guidelines for decades to come.

Tasmanian Liberal Senator Guy Barnett said the Senate committee would work to ensure that the radiation management regimes remain strong.

“So that is an area that obviously we will need to have careful review of and scrutiny of as a Senate committee,” Senator Barnett said.

“I think that is something that perhaps has not been given a lot of consideration to date.

“So in the weeks ahead we will need to get our head around that.”

Senator Barnett said he would also be making sure local stakeholders are considered.

A submission from the Australian Centre for Environmental Law says there is a need for procedural fairness to ensure the interests of traditional owners and the Territory government are considered when making decisions on the waste dump.

“The issue of procedural fairness is something that is important to protect the rights of individuals, key stakeholders, the Northern Territory Government, traditional landowners as well,” Senator Barnett said.

“So I think there is some points that have validity and they will need to be tested in the weeks ahead.”

The Northern Land Council says traditional owners of the proposed site could be exploited if details of an anthropological study are made public.

Greens Senator Scott Ludlam has called for the release of all relevant documents held by the NLC on the proposed site at Muckaty Station.

The head of the NLC, Kim Hill said he told Mr Ludlam at the inquiry yesterday he has good reasons for keeping the study confidential.

“We will not release documentation to anyone who raises concerns about traditional ownership of lands in NLC region,” Mr Hill said.

“There are scrupulous people out there who will take advantage of traditional owners, and everybody seems to be traditional owner these days.”

Senate hears dump will ‘build children’s future’

A Ngapa land owner has told a Senate inquiry there is no reason a nuclear waste dump should not be built at Muckaty Station, north of Tennant Creek.

Amy Lauder told the inquiry a nuclear waste dump at Muckaty Station will help her people build a better life for their children.

Ms Lauder says other Indigenous groups who are opposed to the dump, simply want a share of the Commonwealth compensation that will be paid for the site.

“We nominated our land because we want to make better life for our children,” Ms Lauder said.

The Northern Land Council told the inquiry Ngapa ownership of the proposed dump site is not disputed.

But David Sweeney from the Australian Conservation Foundation says the traditional owners only want the dump because they desperately need the money.

He says Muckaty is not a suitable area for a waste dump.

Western Australian Greens Senator Scott Ludlam says the government’s nuclear waste dump legislation is ambiguous and traditional land owners could be severely disadvantaged.

Senator Ludlam is a member of a Senate committee examining the legislation.

He says the Government has not consulted enough communities about the proposed site for a nuclear waste dump at Muckaty Station, north of Tennant Creek.

“The amount of compensation in a way is immaterial,” Senator Ludlam said.

“If you take $12 million and divide it over a period of 300 years, or a period of 10,000 years, the amount of money is absolutely insignificant.

“But it is still not going to be any form of compensation for the permanent sacrificing of an area to this kind of radioactive material.”

Australian National University researcher, Dr James Prest told the inquiry that the Government’s nuclear waste legislation is ambiguous.

He says future land owners may have little or no say over how a nuclear waste facility is managed.

“There is no legal mechanism created, in terms of a person who would represent the rights of future generations,” Dr Prest said.

The Australian Nuclear Science and Technology Organisation (ANSTO) says a waste dump will be safe and conform with all international standards.

Adi Paterson, from ANSTO, told the inquiry radioactive medical waste was being stored in several places around Australia and a secure, central storage facility would be safer.

“The site should be an area of low population density,” Mr Paterson said.

Ferguson evades protest through back-door escape

The Federal Resources Minister Martin Ferguson has avoided protesters in Darwin by leaving through the workers entrance of a popular tourist attraction.

The Minister was at Crocodylus Park to announce $100,000 in Federal Government funding for a new crocodile viewing area.

Seven protestors were at the entrance to the park, voicing their opposition to a nuclear waste dump at Muckaty Station near Tennant Creek.

The protesters were out the front waiting for the Minister to leave.

“I am about creating a legal framework, which will enable a site at Muckaty to be considered,” Mr Ferguson told the ABC at a press conference inside the tourist park.

A Senate committee is currently considering federal waste dump legislation.

One protestor, Justin Tutty said the Minister needed to release more information about the plans.

“I reckon Mr Ferguson has a nerve to show his face in these parts,” Mr Tutty said.

But Mr Ferguson left the tourist attraction through a back entrance, avoiding the protestors.

Later today Mr Ferguson told the ABC that protesters will not stop him from making tough decisions on nuclear waste dump legislation.

He said he was not surprised there were protestors at Crocodylus Park, and he expected the demonstrations to continue.

“Every time I go to my electorate office lately, I hear about the latest protests, that’s part of life,” Mr Ferguson said.

“It is also my responsibility to make sure I get through a legislative program which enables us to make those tough decisions.”

China adding missiles near Taiwan – U.S. navy official

China has added long-range missiles near Taiwan and leads the self-ruled island in military defences, a U.S. navy official said, suggesting that Taiwan may need new F-16 jet fighters.

China has deployed “an increasing number” of Russian surface-to-air missiles across an ocean strait about 160 km (100 miles) from Taiwan, U.S. Navy Commander Robert Willard told a Senate committee in Washington but did not give a timeframe.

“Beijing remains committed to eventual unification with Taiwan and has not ruled out the use of force to achieve that goal,” Willard said, according to a statement made available on Saturday by the U.S. Pacific Command.

“The (People’s Liberation Army’s) continued military advancements sustain a trend of shifting the cross-Strait military balance in Beijing’s favour,” he said.

A $6.4-billion U.S. arms package for Taiwan announced in January would shore up the island’s self-defence, but has enraged China.

Although Willard did not say whether Washington should grant Taiwan’s long sought request to buy F-16 fighter jets, seen as a red line in already tense Sino-U.S. ties, he said existing aircraft would “have to be recapitalised”.

China has claimed sovereignty over Taiwan since 1949, when Mao Zedong’s forces won the Chinese civil war and Chiang Kai-shek’s Nationalists fled to the island. But ties have warmed since 2008 as the two sides began to talk trade.

(Reporting by Ralph Jennings; Editing by Sugita Katyal)

IPCC chief Pachauri blasts critics for portraying scientists as climate criminals

London, Mar. 27 (ANI): In a strongly worded article published on the Guardian website, Rajendra Pachauri, the chairperson of the UN-sponsored Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), has hit out at those in “positions of power and responsibility” who are trying to portray “dedicated scientists as climate criminals”.

Pachauri also accused critics for using an error in the 2007 IPCC report to question the scientific basis of climate change of “an act of astonishing intellectual legerdemain [sleight of hand]“.

Scientific knowledge of climate change, he says, is “something we distort and trivialise at our peril,” he adds.

Pachauri”s comments come after repeated attacks on the credibility of the IPCC following the high-profile discovery of a mistake about melting Himalayan glaciers in its report.

The mistake has prompted calls for Pachauri to resign and forced the IPCC to convene an international panel of experts to review the way it operates.

In the Guardian article, Pachauri writes: “Thousands of scientists from across the world have worked diligently and in an objective and transparent manner to provide scientific evidence for action to meet the growing challenge of climate change. To obscure this reality through misplaced emphasis on an error in a nearly 3,000-page rigorous document would be unfortunate.”

He adds: “Even more unfortunate is the effort of some in positions of power and responsibility to indict dedicated scientists as ”climate criminals”. I sincerely hope the world is not witnessing a new form of persecution of those who defy conventional ignorance and pay a terrible price for their scientifically valid beliefs.”

The web site article appears to be a reference to James Inhofe, a US senator and long-standing climate sceptic, who last month called for a criminal investigation of climate scientists.

Inhofe published a minority report from the Senate committee on environment and public works that claimed climate scientists involved with a controversy over emails from the University of East Anglia released online “violated fundamental ethical principles governing taxpayer-funded research and, in some cases, may have violated federal laws”.

The report named 17 American and British climate experts as “key players” in the affair and highlighted their roles in preparing IPCC reports.

The list included Phil Jones and Keith Briffa of the University of East Anglia”s Climatic Research Unit, and Peter Stott, a leading expert at the Met Office.

Michael Mann, a US scientist at Penn State University, who is on the list, said: “I think the following quote characterises the situation best: ”Continuous research by our best scientists … may be made impossible by the creation of an atmosphere in which no man feels safe against the public airing of unfounded rumours, gossip, and vilification.” The quote wasn”t made during the last few months. It was made by US president Harry S Truman in 1948, in response to politically motivated attacks against scientists associated with the dark era of McCarthyism.”

Mann added: “I fear that is precisely the sort of atmosphere that is being created, and sure, it impacts research. The more time scientists have to spend fending off these sorts of attacks and dealing with this sort of nonsense, the less time is available to them to actually do science, and to push the forefront of our knowledge forward. Perhaps that is the intent?”

Pachauri says it was “to be expected” that the critical choices that climate change asks of human society “would pose challenges for some stakeholders and sectors of the economy”.

“But to ignore the IPCC”s scientific findings would lead to impacts that impose larger costs than those required today to stabilise the Earth”s climate,” he added. (ANI)

Hospital treatment for PNG nationals ‘costs Qld millions’

A Senate inquiry in Brisbane has been told it costs Queensland almost $7 million a year to provide hospital treatment for Papua New Guinea (PNG) nationals.

A Senate committee is investigating matters including health, environment, and cross border protection in the Torres Strait.

After hearings in the region over the past few days the inquiry moved to Brisbane.

Queensland Health’s Bronwyn Nardi told the committee more money needs to spent on improving services in PNG through aid efforts.

“We think when we’re looking at the data of the numbers coming through that it’s probably costing Queensland Health in the vicinity of $6.8 million to $6.9 million a year,” she said.

Under a new departmental policy, Queensland Health says it will only treat acute cases involving PNG nationals.

Ms Nardi says the policy provides clarity for health professionals in the region.

“Acute cases is what we will treat and any ongoing care beyond that occurs back on the Papua New Guinean side of the border,” she said.

Ms Nardi says some Papua New Guineans are travelling to the Torres Strait Islands to be treated for serious diseases including drug-resistant tuberculosis.

“In Australia we’ve managed to very much contain tuberculosis so it’s in our interests for both the Torres Strait and also for Australia to ensure that Papua New Guineans presenting with tuberculosis get good and proper treatment for the full term of treatment,” she said.

“That’s what our clinicians in the Torres Strait are doing – they are providing that treatment.”

Inquiry chairman Senator Russell Trood says border protection is also a challenge.

“I don’t think closing the border is a realistic option,” he said.

“These communities are interconnected.”

The committee will return to Canberra before a report is prepared.

Axed insulation scheme linked to 120 fires

The Environment Department says 120 house fires have now been linked to the Federal Government’s bungled home insulation scheme.

A Senate committee is investigating the scheme, which was scrapped after the deaths of four installers and a series of house fires.

Department spokesman Malcolm Thompson says he cannot say how many people have suffered injuries.

He has given updated figures showing that as of yesterday there have been 120 house fires linked to insulation installed as part of the Government’s stimulus program.

He said there were three cases in the ACT, 47 in New South Wales, 19 in Queensland, two in South Australia, 47 in Victoria and two in Western Australia.

Mr Thompson says according to his documents, there have been no house fires linked to the insulation scheme in Tasmania or the Northern Territory.

The committee has also heard there is about $1 billion left to spend on the program which will replace the failed insulation scheme.

But department officials have told the committee that the cost of fixing the problems with the scrapped scheme will be taken from that total.

They say that will include the removal of foil insulation, and they do not yet know what the repair bill will be.

The new scheme is due to start within months but the officials say they will advise the Government on how appropriate that timetable is.

They had earlier said the short timeframe for the original scheme had been regarded as a risk.

Hearing to debate vegetation laws

A Senate committee investigating the effects of native vegetation laws will hold a public hearing in Perth next month.

The inquiry is analysing the impact of the laws on land values and productivity.

Western Australian farmers want the laws changed to relax the restrictions on the clearing of the native vegetation on their land.

The committee’s Perth hearing will be held on April 20.

Submissions to the committee closed March 5, with a final report due on April 30.

Inquiry probes Torres Strait-PNG migration

The head of a Senate committee that is conducting an inquiry into the Torres Strait says it is important it finds out the extent of the problems facing the region.

The committee is in Torres Strait this week to inspect health, defence and Customs’ facilities, and to hear evidence.

Committee chairman and Queensland Senator Russell Trood says one issue it is looking at is the movement of Papua New Guinean nationals into the area.

“The agencies in Canberra tend to be pretty relaxed about the arrangements. They think the Torres Strait treaty arrangements are working pretty well,” he said.

“They generally tend to be comfortable with the level of movement back and forth, but we know that’s not the local view of things.

“There are quite a lot of concerns.”

Dump hearing snub a ‘slap in the face’

Tennant Creek residents are angry with the decision not to hold local public hearings on the proposed nuclear waste dump for Muckaty Station.

The Senate committee in charge of the inquiry into the Federal Government’s proposed site has opted to conduct hearings in Darwin and Canberra.

Tennant Creek resident Alex Pickhorn lodged a submission against the project and says the decision leaves the central Australian residents most affected by the proposal out in the cold.

“I think it’s a bit of a slap in the face to the town considering that the site is 150 kilometres north of Tennant Creek and that the Senate committee did not even travel to see the area where the proposed dump might be,” he said.