South Australia Election

Australian Federal, State and Local Politics
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cods
Posts: 6433
Joined: Wed Nov 30, 2016 9:52 am

Re: South Australia Election

Post by cods » Sat Mar 10, 2018 6:53 pm

Neferti~ wrote:
LEFTWINGER supreme wrote:Cleaned up corruption ICAC took 16 libtards down
South Australia has nothing to recommend it. I don't care if the citizens vote Labor, again. They get what they deserve. Christopher Pyne. He is one weird looking bloke. :rofl

Image

have to admit I am not a person who voted on looks...

but he lost me when he he backed Turnbull... two things I dislike very much Liars and disloyalty..

sadly it impedes all of them today.

I lost faith a while back now.

LEFTWINGER supreme
Posts: 1669
Joined: Thu Dec 15, 2016 4:00 pm

Re: South Australia Election

Post by LEFTWINGER supreme » Sat Mar 10, 2018 6:58 pm

Putting a dollar value on corruption tsk tsk

cods
Posts: 6433
Joined: Wed Nov 30, 2016 9:52 am

Re: South Australia Election

Post by cods » Sat Mar 10, 2018 9:49 pm

LEFTWINGER supreme wrote:Putting a dollar value on corruption tsk tsk

what you on about Willis?... no one and I mean no one will ever surpass Obeids millions of corruption.....put him and McDonald together with tripodi
as fetch boy....



you seriously have a lot to live down boy!

LEFTWINGER supreme
Posts: 1669
Joined: Thu Dec 15, 2016 4:00 pm

Re: South Australia Election

Post by LEFTWINGER supreme » Sat Mar 10, 2018 11:03 pm

Be it a bottle of wine or a million dollars being on the take is being on the take

cods
Posts: 6433
Joined: Wed Nov 30, 2016 9:52 am

Re: South Australia Election

Post by cods » Sun Mar 11, 2018 10:10 am

LEFTWINGER supreme wrote:Be it a bottle of wine or a million dollars being on the take is being on the take


what take it was a gift...and what they did was wrong I give you that.,....but nothing compares to labors corruptions

absolutely nothing.....most of your crims end up in JAIL....seriously you need to take a good look at that...

god only knows what the UNION CEOs get away with..

cods
Posts: 6433
Joined: Wed Nov 30, 2016 9:52 am

Re: South Australia Election

Post by cods » Sun Mar 11, 2018 11:02 am

https://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/news/ ... 6d0b278561


just a coincidence whinger.....but heres one of your old mob complaining about life in JAIL... :rofl

A PAINFUL recovery from a jail bashing, whingeing about an inmate’s accent, pronouncements on Malcolm Turnbull’s future and bitching about the endless wait to join a sex-offender rehabilitation program — life behind bars for former politician and paedophile Milton Orkopoulos has been revealed in a ­series of intimate letters.

They include fond ­exchanges with a former high-profile inmate which are signed off “Love, Milly”.

Orkopoulos is now 60. Long Bay prison is his home and his next parole review date isn’t listed until January next year. He is almost a decade into a 14-year sentence.




His young victims were fed cannabis, sometimes in Orkopoulos’s parliamentary office, and heroin before they were abused.

In Cooma prison — which Orkopoulos nicknamed “Casa Cooma” — he surrounded himself with younger inmates, handing out cigarettes and ­fatherly advice, much to the distaste of corrective services officers, prison sources say.


minister for Aboriginal Affairs :roll: :roll: :roll:

LEFTWINGER supreme
Posts: 1669
Joined: Thu Dec 15, 2016 4:00 pm

Re: South Australia Election

Post by LEFTWINGER supreme » Sun Mar 11, 2018 11:21 pm

He can stay in prison for another twenty years my dear

Juliar
Posts: 1355
Joined: Wed Dec 28, 2016 10:56 am

Re: South Australia Election

Post by Juliar » Tue Mar 13, 2018 6:50 am

The good burghers of the blackouts state SA now have the chance to purge their downtrodden state of the fowl evil of the imposter union controlled Labor farce.

Will they follow Tasmania's excellent example ?





Why the South Australian election is the nation's most gripping contest
Katharine Murphy Sat 10 Mar 2018 04.00 AEDT Last modified on Sun 11 Mar 2018 14.13 AEDT

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South Australian Liberal leader Steven Marshall

Is Liberal leader Steven Marshall the most likely to emerge from the election chrysalis as premier?


In Hillcrest in the north east of Adelaide, Christopher Pyne is talking about traffic jams. An hour before, he’d been fretting about white ants in the A-frames of the Liberal party’s election posters.

Outside a suburban house, flanked by the Liberal candidate for the Labor-held marginal state seat of Torrens, Therese Kenny, Pyne says Labor has had 16 years to fix the mess of Fosters Road. He got stuck in traffic there recently, “and I thought, stuff it, I need to turn right, and I’m stuck here”.

We are on Don and Dawn Goldney’s front porch. The retired couple will be voting Liberal when South Australians go to the polls on Saturday, 17 March. Pyne notes that the Goldney front garden, neat as a pin in the late summer heat, is looking “vibrant”.

“Do you do the hedging yourself Don?” Kenny inquires, deploying the generic kerbside small talk of a politician in election mode. Before Don can answer, Pyne cuts him off: “If Therese gets elected, she’ll come back and do that for you.

“She’ll do anything for a vote.”

With Don and Dawn solidly in the decided column, Pyne and Kenny press on in search of more votes. Keen to harvest impressions, we hang back.

Read the full story here

https://www.theguardian.com/australia-n ... ng-contest

Juliar
Posts: 1355
Joined: Wed Dec 28, 2016 10:56 am

Re: South Australia Election

Post by Juliar » Tue Mar 13, 2018 6:52 am

Wonder why the SA Libs have not hammered the power supply chaos in SA ?



South Australian Liberals unveil top projects
11:22am Mar 12, 2018

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SA Liberal leader Steven Marshall (right) with Minister for Foreign Affairs Julie Bishop (centre) and Liberal candidate for Heysen Josh Teague on Sunday, March 11. (AAP)

The South Australian Opposition has released its top projects which will form the basis of government infrastructure spending if the LIberals win Saturday's state election.

Opposition Leader Steven Marshall has already promised to establish Infrastructure SA within 100 days of the poll to evaluate projects and says his list will be the key priorities for the new group.

"South Australia desperately needs a properly researched, methodically implemented infrastructure plan to deliver more investment, more jobs and greater prosperity," Mr Marshall said on Monday.

"Infrastructure South Australia will end the current practice of Labor Ministers deciding infrastructure investment based around political considerations and replace it with decisions based on economic imperatives."

Mr Marshall on Monday also pledged a Liberal government to have established South Australia's first 20-year State Infrastructure Strategy by the end of his first term in office.

His top projects are:

* Completion of the North-South road corridor through metropolitan Adelaide.

* A grain and minerals port on Eyre Peninsula.

* The GlobeLink freight airport and road corridor near Murray Bridge.

* Completion of the Gawler rail Electrification.

* An extension of the O-Bahn guided busway between Tea Tree Plaza Interchange and Golden Grove.

* Grade separations at major metropolitan area intersections to remove level crossings.

* Infrastructure development on Le Fevre Peninsula including light rail, commercial, retail residential and recreational facilities to suit the needs of the naval shipbuilding program at Osborne.

* Sealing the Strzelecki Track in the state's north.

* An underground rail link in the CBD between the northern and southern train lines.


Mr Marshall said his government would also give consideration to the rollout of additional affordable housing, increased capacity for South Australia's prisons and new court infrastructure including the use of modern technology and satellite courts.

https://www.9news.com.au/national/2018/ ... a-projects

Juliar
Posts: 1355
Joined: Wed Dec 28, 2016 10:56 am

Re: South Australia Election

Post by Juliar » Tue Mar 13, 2018 6:53 am

The Libs can win the SA election just by concentrating on the very high cost of electricity which is a result of the Secondary Power renewable rubbish which means the electricity is generated TWICE once by the unreliable unstable Secondary Power renewable rubbish and once by the reliable super stable Primary Power Coal generators.



South Australia pays the price of big system peaks
By Giles Parkinson on 12 March 2018

South Australia is once again being assailed for having the most expensive wholesale electricity prices in the country – and new data underlines why it is the state most vulnerable to extraordinary jumps in prices at times of high peaks and interrupted supply.

Image

Last week, we published this graph (above) to show how South Australia’s price premium over other states has existed for the best part of two decades – courtesy of its small grid at the end of the line, the control of a few big players, and its “peaky grid”, exacerbated by its mild climate and the occasional heatwave.

The problems over South Australia’s “peaky grid” were identified more than a decade ago by the local grid owner (well before the emergence of renewables) which noted its exposure to sharp rises in prices, particularly in the midst of heatwaves.

This summer has been no exception. From December 1 to February 28, the total cost of wholesale electricity (market turnover) in the South Australia market was $929 million, according to data put together by Dylan McConnell of the Climate and Energy College in Melbourne.

Of this sum, around 34% was attributable to price spikes above $300 – the standard cap contract strike price – that occurred in just 42 half-hour trading intervals. That’s a total of 21 hours and represents just 0.97 per cent of time.

Such events were typified by January 18, when a heatwave was likely to push prices higher as more customers turned to air conditioning.

But prices soared following the trip of the big Loy Yang B coal generator in Victoria – an event that sent prices near to their market peak in both Victoria and South Australia.

This is not atypical. Peaking gas plants and diesel generators typically operate for just a few hours of the day – and need to recoup as much as they can in those periods. Hence the high prices. But it is wrong to put the finger on renewables, as the first graph above explains.

One of the fundamental problems of the design of the NEM is that both generation and network design have delivered enormous gains for assets that are just used for a few hours of the year.

Yet, at the same time, regulators have consistently rejected proposals that could ease that peak demand – energy efficiency, demand response, storage incentives – under pressure from incumbent interests wanting to defend the gold plating of prices.

It explains the government’s eagerness to encourage new forms of storage – including the Tesla big battery, which is already slashing peak prices from the small and little known FCAS market, pumped hydro and solar thermal.

The data from McConnell showed that in South Australia over summer:

In the 42 trading intervals that the price was above $300, the volume weighted price was $3,171.42/MWh
For the remainder of summer (i.e. intervals below $300) the volume weighted prices was $93.50/MWh
The average over the whole summer was $146.15/MWh (i.e. those 42 hours added about $50/MWh to volume weighted prices over summer)
On that last point, it is interesting to note that in December, when there were no major pricing peaks above $300/MWh, South Australia’s wholesale electricity prices were lower than both Victoria and Tasmania.

The peak pricing events in South Australia over January and February happened on six different days – Jan 18 and 19, Jan 25, Jan 28, Feb 7 and Feb 8.

http://reneweconomy.com.au/south-austra ... aks-85072/

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