Alan Kohler is one of Australia’s most experienced commentators and journalists. Alan is the founder of Eureka Report, Australia’s most successful investment newsletter, and Business Spectator, a 24-hour free business news and commentary website. He also hosts Inside Business, a half-hour Sunday programme on the ABC, is the finance presenter on the ABC News - and producer of the nightly graph (or two).
The key influences that broke the dollar's historic correlation with commodity prices are appearing to weaken, with the US and China set to determine a new level for the currency.
The first shot may have been fired ahead of a potential post-election Labor leadership battle between likely candidates Bill Shorten and Greg Combet – and the battlefront could be climate policy.
Barry O'Farrell's support gives some hope for the Gonski reforms, but Labor’s message is diminished by what's now generally assumed to be its terminal position.
Yahoo's $1.1bn acquisition of Tumblr is more than an attempt to "buy hipsters". In fact, Yahoo needs content platforms to fuel its growth and it seems Tumblr proved to be a prime candidate.
Samsung's latest smartphone is full of tips and tricks to help differentiate it from the sea of other Android-operated devices. Yet these "key features" come off more as marketing gimmicks than advances in smartphone technology.
CEOs outline changing views on corporate spending and profits, their economic expectations and political dissatisfaction, including advice for Julia Gillard and Tony Abbott.
UK-based Zeebox wants to be the intermediary for all social media-television interactions. It will not only have to lure viewers, but the networks themselves.
Spectacularly rising gasoline prices loom as Barack Obama's Achilles heel in the president election. And while recent energy policy declarations may offer some protection, they ignore the biggest challenge of all.
Climate change is not the most important energy issue on our planet any more as evidenced by Obama and backed by Wayne Swan yesterday when he stated 'the carbon tax goes to economic efficiency and environmental sustainability'. Since when are higher energy prices economically efficient? What happened to the floods, cyclones, droughts and rising oceans; and the pictures of all those cooling towers emitting pure water pollution (Can Obama sidestep a gas explosion?, February 27).
Seems to me like it is just another big tax, as the scientific measurements of atmospheric carbon dioxide shows that its concentration in the atmosphere has increased at exactly the same rate since the Kyoto agreement as the rate preceding it.
Hence the risk of climate change is not being addressed by any emission reduction policies, mitigation has no chance of working, that only leaves adaption. To fund adaption Australia needs the most efficient economy possible, and at this point in the price cycle, and for the foreseeable future, hydrocarbons are the most efficient energy source available to us.
Comments on this article
Comments PolicyClimate change is not the most important energy issue on our planet any more as evidenced by Obama and backed by Wayne Swan yesterday when he stated 'the carbon tax goes to economic efficiency and environmental sustainability'. Since when are higher energy prices economically efficient? What happened to the floods, cyclones, droughts and rising oceans; and the pictures of all those cooling towers emitting pure water pollution (Can Obama sidestep a gas explosion?, February 27).
Seems to me like it is just another big tax, as the scientific measurements of atmospheric carbon dioxide shows that its concentration in the atmosphere has increased at exactly the same rate since the Kyoto agreement as the rate preceding it.
Hence the risk of climate change is not being addressed by any emission reduction policies, mitigation has no chance of working, that only leaves adaption. To fund adaption Australia needs the most efficient economy possible, and at this point in the price cycle, and for the foreseeable future, hydrocarbons are the most efficient energy source available to us.