Friday, 17 April 2026

NSW electric buses, trains and light rail services to run entirely on renewable energy from 2027 in $1.9bn deal.

Extract from The Guardian

Electric buses charge through overhead pantographs

Exclusive: Minns government announces contract with Snowy Energy to power public transport in seven-year contract

The Minns government on Friday announced it had signed a contract with Snowy Energy to bring all public transport operations in the state under a single renewable energy agreement for the first time. The seven-year deal comes into effect from July 2027 and will last until 2034.

The NSW minister for transport, John Graham, said it would reduce costs at a time when fuel uncertainty was seeing more Australians cut back on driving in favour of public transport.

“Cost of living pressures are real for household and government budgets,” he said.

“This contract reduces costs and moves us towards better environmental outcomes while we deliver a reliable public transport network.”

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The NSW government, which has rejected calls to follow other states by making public transport free during the fuel crisis, said savings of $130m on transport power bills would be reinvested into services.

It said Snowy Energy, the retail brand of the commonwealth-owed Snowy Hydro, was awarded the contract after a competitive two-year process. Prior to the deal, Transport for NSW was already Snowy Energy’s largest customer, contributing more than 10% of its energy sales.

The Snowy Hydro CEO, Dennis Barnes, said the deal would see public transport’s consumption of energy matched to wind, solar and hydroelectric generators in its network through the issue of renewable energy “certificates”.

“What this deal does is match the consumption of [Transport for NSW] to the production of renewable energy somewhere, but it isn’t a physical connection. It’s a financially traceable connection through certificates.”

He said in the future this would include assets such as the Snowy Uungala wind farm, under construction near Dubbo. Snowy Hydro operates three gas-fired power stations, with fossil fuels contributing 5%-10% of the power it generates annually.

The state government has said the deal will lead to “significant emissions reductions”, avoiding the equivalent of more than 800,000 tonnes of CO2 annually compared with conventional power.

Transport for NSW, which uses almost as much power as all other NSW public agencies combined, has a target to reduce operational emissions by 65% by 2030 and reaching net zero by 2035.

Fossil fuels are still used on most of the state’s public buses, as well as on diesel-powered ferries and intercity and regional trains.

The new regional rail fleet, which is bimodal and runs on diesel and electricity, due to replace diesel-powered XPT trains, is several years late. The state government has said electric ferries will fully replace diesel-powered vessels by 2035.

The government has ordered more than 500 electric buses, of which hundreds are already in operation, with 7,500 more expected to fully replace the 8,000-strong fleet of diesel-powered vehicles.

Last month, the NSW Anti-Slavery Commissioner found Transport for NSW had not taken reasonable steps to engage with groups affected by the potential use of forced labor in Xinjiang in China and the Democratic Republic of Congo in the supply chains for lithium-ion batteries.

Palestinians fear Gaza is being forgotten as Iran war drags on.

 Extract from ABC News

Dozens of make shift tents on muddy dirt ground.

Palestinians sheltering in tent cities in Gaza fear they have been forgotten. (ABC News)

Pope Leo blasts 'tyrants' following public disagreement with Donald Trump over Iran war.

 Extract from ABC News

A man in white robes is surrounded by people and cameras as he waves

Pope Leo XIV in Bamenda, Cameroon. (REUTERS/Guglielmo Mangiapane)

In short:

Pope Leo has blasted the "handful of tyrants" spending billions on war during his visit to Cameroon.

The pontiff did not name any individual but the comments come days after US President Donald Trump attacked the pope over his stance on the war in Iran.

What's next?

Experts say Donald Trump's repeated attacks on the pope are losing him favour with Catholics in Italy and around the world.

Iran briefing with Matthew Doran: 10-day ceasefire in Lebanon begins without Israeli withdrawal.

Extract from ABC News

Soldiers standing next an armoured vehicle

Israeli soldiers rest near the Israel-Lebanon border, in Israel. (Reuters: Florion Goga)

Of presidents and popes

Extract from Eureka Street 

  • Bill Uren
  • 16 April 2026                                  

 

There are always historical precedents, even for secular rulers attacking Christian popes. Indeed, the date itself, April 13, should remind us. For it is on April 13 that we celebrate the feast of Pope St Martin, and it is also the date on which in Australia we became aware of Donald Trump’s ill-mannered criticisms of Pope Leo.

Pope Martin was the last pope to be martyred. It was at the behest of a secular ruler like Donald Trump, the Byzantine emperor Constans II.

It was as a precocious ten-year-old that Constans II acceded to the co-emperorship of the Roman-Byzantine Empire in 641. The Empire was constantly under attack from external forces, both Arab and Muslim, and many of its richest provinces were surrendered to the enemy. Internally, too, the Empire was racked by divisions, surprisingly by disputes of a theological character.

The Council of Chalcedon had defined in 451 that there were two natures in the one person of Jesus Christ: a divine nature and a human nature. This was anathema to many Eastern theologians who espoused Monophysitism, that there was only one nature in Christ, the divine. A compromise theological position, Monothelitism, that there was only one will in Christ, the divine will, was sponsored by the long-serving Eastern emperor Heraclius in an attempt to reconcile the warring factions. Pope Honorius and the four patriarchs of the East — Constantinople, Alexandria, Antioch, and Jerusalem — all supported Heraclius’s Monothelitic compromise, but the divisions were not healed.

So, in 648, the Emperor Constans II issued an imperial edict, the Tupos, which made it illegal even to discuss the topic of whether Christ had one or two wills. While the Tupos professed to maintain an impartial stance between orthodox Chalcedonianism and Monothelitism, it was perceived by Rome to favour the Monothelites by recognising their doctrine as a possible alternative for Christians. In response, Pope Martin I in 649 summoned 105 Western bishops to Rome and, in the Lateran Council’s twenty canons, censured Monothelitism, its authors, and its writings. It condemned not only the Tupos of Constans II but also the Ecthesis of a former patriarch of Constantinople, for which the revered emperor Heraclius had stood sponsor.

 

“Martin was the last pope to be martyred under a secular ruler. He was certainly not the last pope to come under attack for proclaiming orthodox Christian doctrine in the face of secular power.”

 

The reaction of Constans II was swift and decisive. He instructed his exarch in Italy to arrest the pope and to convey him to Constantinople for trial. It took three years before the exarch could carry out these orders, but in 653 Martin was arrested, tried, and condemned in Constantinople, and only saved from execution through the intercession of the patriarch of Constantinople. Instead, he was exiled to the Crimea where, enduring torture and starvation, he died in 655.

Martin was the last pope to be martyred under a secular ruler. He was certainly not the last pope to come under attack for proclaiming orthodox Christian doctrine in the face of secular power.

In the light of recent events, we do not have to look far to identify a contemporary parallel, even if it took April 13, the feast of St Martin, to remind us not only of the seventh-century precedent to President Trump’s remarks, but also that only too often the ways of politicians and secular rulers — “the end justifies the means” — are at a remove, sometimes scandalously so, from the principles of popes.

 


Bill Uren, SJ, AO, is a Scholar-in-residence at Newman College at the University of Melbourne. A former Provincial Superior of the Australian and New Zealand Jesuits, he has lectured in moral philosophy and bioethics in universities in Melbourne, Brisbane and Perth and has served on the Australian Health Ethics Committee and many clinical and human research ethics committees in universities, hospitals and research centres.

Thursday, 16 April 2026

Iran briefing with Matthew Doran: There could be respite for Lebanon despite Netanyahu's latest orders.

 Extract from ABC News

People sitting in makeshift tent

Displaced people stand outside tents used as shelter in Beirut. (AP Photo/Bilal Hussein)

Albanese government's frustration rises alongside fuel prices and inflation.

Extract from ABC News

Analysis

By David Speers

Anthony Albanese

After initially supporting the US and Israeli strikes against Iran, the prime minister and foreign minister have spent the past few weeks calling for "de-escalation". (ABC News: Stuart Carnegie )


Fuel prices and inflation aren't the only metrics climbing as the Strait of Hormuz remains shut.