miket12
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Political Pundit
Has Crusher moved on from boyracers to speed cameras?The new ramraid
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Has Crusher moved on from boyracers to speed cameras?The new ramraid
Wind and solar have to be firmed by something and fast peaker gas plants are an energy companies dream. Fast start up and spin down and is the price setter when wind and solar fall over, leading to massive price (aka profit spikes)I see the state is going to build a LNG plant here/infrastructure in New Plymouth.
Dumb idea and the FE report on it made a lot of sense to me.
With Huntly running at full capacity on Coal (cheaper than LNG will ever be) it will require all the Gas fired plants around the country to be re-commissioned.
And, no way in hell will this reduce our power bills.
Would have been better off throwing a billion into exploration on the basis of getting some equity partners to share the risk.

Sorry, been letting it slip. Grandad.Absolutely. How could I be anything else.
Juju must be away?
Apparently not. WCC minutes in 2021 show that there were options presented under the 10 year plan to spend several million on upgrading water infrastructure or bike lanes.And the sewage? Neoliberalist ideology enforced privatisation resulting in Veolia profit stripping and under investing
Missed you, was getting concerned you were okSorry, been letting it slip. Grandad.
The math on registrations is right, but the conclusion is missing one important piece of context: Maori seats can be contested by any party.It's interesting that no one on bsky ever complains that our election results are always biased towards the left anyway.... according to the latest Electoral Commission data, there are 3,287,971 people registered on the general roll and 303,911 people registered on the Maori roll. At the next election, there will be 64 general seats and 7 Maori seats.
So that equates to an average of just under 51,500 voters for each general seat and just under 43,500 voters for each Maori seat. If the number of voters was the same for all the electorates, there would either be only 6 Maori seats or 76 general seats.
Election results always start with the left one seat ahead.
Not that it matters to me.... I'm voting for Team Opposed to Pussy Protection.
Concerned you were ok or concerned you werenβt ok?Missed you, was getting concerned you were ok
Yeah, isn't English wonderful lol. Grammatically should have been you weren't okConcerned you were ok or concerned you werenβt ok?


Rizzah as always has replied very articulately, but could you elaborate on how you think election results are always biased towards the left?It's interesting that no one on bsky ever complains that our election results are always biased towards the left anyway.... according to the latest Electoral Commission data, there are 3,287,971 people registered on the general roll and 303,911 people registered on the Maori roll. At the next election, there will be 64 general seats and 7 Maori seats.
So that equates to an average of just under 51,500 voters for each general seat and just under 43,500 voters for each Maori seat. If the number of voters was the same for all the electorates, there would either be only 6 Maori seats or 76 general seats.
Election results always start with the left one seat ahead.
Not that it matters to me.... I'm voting for Team Opposed to Pussy Protection.
Oh dearβ¦. I wonder where the $14 billion plus for Labourβs proposed Lake Onslow battery was going to from. Surely, not from Tax Payers.Silence from the anti tax brigade on this new tax that will send electricity bills even higher to pay for fossil fuel regression
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HilariousOh dearβ¦. I wonder where the $14 billion plus for Labourβs proposed Lake Onslow battery was going to from. Surely, not from Tax Payers.
I wonder what would happen if the power generators instead paid a lower dividend to share holders? Or used money for planned new generation development to pay it. Of course, the money could only come from the tax payer.
Sure. Not sure who Tabatha Paul is, but Tamatha Paul was a councillor during that time.Apparently not. WCC minutes in 2021 show that there were options presented under the 10 year plan to spend several million on upgrading water infrastructure or bike lanes.
Tabatha Paul nominated bike lanes and the vote was carried
Minutes are archived
And to add, companies like Veolia, ABB etc are generally operations and maintenance organisations. Capital expenditure is still the responsibility of the owner, in this case WCC


Government spending doesnβt come from taxes.Oh dearβ¦. I wonder where the $14 billion plus for Labourβs proposed Lake Onslow battery was going to from. Surely, not from Tax Payers.
I wonder what would happen if the power generators instead paid a lower dividend to share holders? Or used money for planned new generation development to pay it. Of course, the money could only come from the tax payer.
Shit, I apologise. I didn't realise us Boomers were responsible for Wellingtons Sewage woes. I honestly meant to pay my rates when i was there.Sure. Not sure who Tabatha Paul is, but Tamatha Paul was a councillor during that time.
You mean a democratic decision by the Wellington Council? Not the person nominating it, a council decision?
If only three waters had passed eh?
And you mention operations - that's a great call, let's look at that.
Yep, the problem has been exacerbated by decades of nimby (not in my budget year) I'm-a-boomer-so-let's-defer-the-cost inaction on all sides.
And then there's Veolia, a privatise profit and socialise cost rapacious vampire corporation.
Pretty lame to try and attribute it to a democratic council decision that doesn't consume oil or coal.
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How Wellingtonβs sewage crisis exposed years of dysfunction
The Moa Point wastewater plant failure has reignited criticism over under-investment β and raised serious questions about the company that runs it.thespinoff.co.nz
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Here's an intelligent comment from a different article too
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I guess the CBA will answer the questions.Government spending doesnβt come from taxes.
Operationally, when the NZ Govt spends, Treasury instructs the RBNZ to credit settlement accounts at commercial banks.
New money is created at the point of spending.
Taxes withdraw money from the economy after the spending.
Bonds (βGovt debtβ) manage the liquidity in the banking reserves system that spending creates. This is part of monetary policy.
Critically, neither taxes nor bonds fund spending.
The sequencing is explicit in RBNZ documentation.
Orthodox fiscal framing gets this sequencing wrong, which is why the debate keeps getting stuck on βwho paysβ instead of βwhatβs possibleβ.
The Govt issues the currency. It can always meet obligations denominated in NZD.
The constraint isnβt tax revenue, gentailer dividends, or shareholder payouts.
Itβs real resources: engineers, materials, project management capability, grid integration, and delivery capacity.
So the $14 billion Lake Onslow question isnβt βwhere does the money come from?β Itβs whether itβs a good project and whether NZ has, or is willing to build, the capacity to deliver it without creating bottlenecks.
It's a resource and capability question, not a taxpayer one.
Pretty damning article. Ironic the most basket case council in the country is the most far left and Green council long criticised for making ideological lefty decisions.Shit, I apologise. I didn't realise us Boomers were responsible for Wellingtons Sewage woes. I honestly meant to pay my rates when i was there.
Perhaps a closer look at the council make up over the last 20 years might explain a lot. Not too many Boomers on there but seems to be a rather Green tinge. Slightly less now that the Mayor of the Year has shot the gap.
And I agree with the add in post above that the debacle is not the total result of a decision made in 2021 but tbf it was a decision not to spend a serious amount of coin on water infrastructure which if passed may have minimised the issues they face at the moment. 5 Years is a reasonable amount of time to carry out a project of the nature proposed. And more importantly, the money was available
Wellington has never had a lack of money problem, just a where it gets spent problem and in this case more on vanity projects than infrastructure.
But and it's a big, Wellingtonians deserve everything they voted for. ( I thought you were an Aucklander? What's with the Welly Love?)
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When the WCC voted for cycleways but not for sewage protection
When Wellington Mayor Andrew Little announced he would raise the cityβs βcatastrophicβ sewage failure with the Prime Minister, he struck the solemn tone of a man confronting an unforeseeable ...wellington.scoop.co.nz
Really..... I don't know how many times I've stated on here that solar and batteries are the way to go until fusion reactors are commercially available.Hilarious
One is a renewable energy source, the other is a regression back to the stone age. No guessing which the righties on here love.