Archive for the ‘Latest activities & outreach’ Category

Where do we get our best value for each megalitre of precious water?

Tuesday, June 26th, 2007

As we get more climate change, we are likely to have more extreme weather events, more droughts and more floods. Over all the predictions by most responsible climate scientists are that fresh water will decrease and Australia will be one of the hardest hit countries. Also as our human population increases, our need for water will increase. We must ask these questions.

This week I have been attending an internationally attended conference on Contamination Cleanup, Eco Forum and Industry Summit. I am really enjoying the industry summit where the audience is much more participatory rather than just listening to presented papers and having 2 or 3 questions at the end of each. People are getting very involved which is great to hear.

http://www.ecoforum.net.au the Contamination CleanUp 07 Conference in Adelaide this June will explore the science and engineering related to contaminated site assessment and remediation, the focus of the Industry Summit will be on the policies, structuring, regulation, risk management, insurance, financing and acquisition issues that impede or make the industry operate.
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Who is Jean Cannon?

Tuesday, June 5th, 2007

I was born in Britain in 1942. My earliest memories are about flowers, of walking through grass so high it was over my head and I was trying to keep up with the big legs, of small animals, ducks and water. Between these memories full of joy and wonderment there are memories of fire, sirens and bombs. When I was a little older and the beaches were open, my great joy was to creep along the breakwaters and look at crabs and other things that lived below water. All my childhood homes were filled with my jars of fish, tadpoles, silkworms and as many other creatures my long-suffering mother could cope with. When I was ten, the rock-pools on the wave cut platform at Avoca Beach north of Sydney, Australia were like aquaria; full of striped fish and other wonderful plants and animals – they are no longer like this, when I was thirteen and bought my first mask and snorkel in Adelaide, my mother was terrified I was going to be eaten by a shark as I swam over the “blue line” of sea grass in waist deep water – this is now several kilometres off shore.

I look around with joy at the natural world but back with deep concern about the large environmental changes I have seen in just one lifetime. I look with total horror at what people still do to each other in the name of peace; having been born underneath a war I recognise the full insanity. I have no influence over this so I concentrate on what I can influence in some small way – which is the environment.
My passion has always been trying to understand and preserve the environment that we live in. Helping businesses to understand that improving the environment also improves their bottom line and working with them to achieve this is the logical flow on from this passion. Businesses find that improving their environmental performance also makes very real dollar savings. It is a true win-win.

I started my adult life as a biology teacher, and then took time out to have three children before returning to teaching because it had the right hours and holidays in the days of no childcare. When the kids were old enough to cope with me working strange hours, I returned to University where I did third year science again in the marine subjects that did not exist when I did my first degree. I found the kids were not able to cope with my using a modem to work online on the University Vax computer. The phone being permanently engaged by mum not teenagers caused a major drama. After 6 years of tertiary study in marine biology I worked part time as an environmental consultant but also helped run my family’s computer business. It was here, in the late 1980s and early 1990s that I learned about small business and the pressures it is under as well as getting involved in Quality Assurance when I implemented ISO 9002, or AS 3902 as it was then, for our family business.

One of the roles I had was as Conservation Council’s nominee on the Aquaculture committee. It was here that I first met the tuna farmers and on mass they were very daunting. When I first started work with them, some eight years later I had a fairly difficult job to establish myself as a credible consultant in their industry. There were some funny stories about the guys when I first started – “I thought women were only useful for two things – in the kitchen and the bedroom but you are different”…………….. “It is too rough”, “you will be seasick”, then having to climb from a rubber ducky to a trawler deck in a rough sea to be met by the skipper with a totally bloodied hand outstretched and various other boys games until I became accepted as a useful person who gave good value even if I was a woman.

An industry person has described me as the “greenie that rolled over” and I have been described by some of the green groups as “having gone over to the Dark Side”. If both sides think I am odd, then I have probably hit the middle ground where I want to be.

I want to state clearly that my views on the urgent need to embrace environmental management by the entire community – not just industry, has not changed. I have deep love and awe of the natural world and concern for the decisions my grandchildren and their friends will have to make.

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About the Book

Tuesday, June 5th, 2007

The stories of a wide range of businesses that have improved their environmental performance and at the same time improved their business efficiencies. Most have achieved the International Standard for environmental management, ISO 14001. The book explains the varied approaches to Environmental Management Systems (EMS) and their outcomes.

This is also the story of how one woman has worked with industry instead of “beating them up”. This pragmatic approach cuts through jargon and red tape to deliver straightforward management systems with real environmental and economic outcomes. In the words of one client, this is “no bullshit” EMS

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Exposed at the Expo!

Monday, June 4th, 2007

I spent the weekend (June 2nd & 3rd 2007) at the EcoLiving Expo in Adelaide where I shared a stand with some lovely people who run the Green Directory. www.thegreendirectory.com.au

This was a great event with lots of people and interesting speakers. I sold some of my books, had one stolen spilt a cup of coffee and made some interesting contacts which now need to be followed up. It is great to actually go out to a crowd like that and meet such a variety of people and find out the green initiatives of all sorts of different businesses plus hearing about the concerns of so may people. It was tiring but fun.

At the same time this weekend I am updating my Australian website and it was and still is (Monday) in a state of confusion and all my emails have gone missing. I daresay I will be inundated tomorrow because my ISP assures me that it is now under control, even if it does not look like it.

Check it out on Tuesday (hopefully). If you get an ugly green site - please wait patiently and try again next day. I have been told throughout my life that all things come to those who wait . Actually I have a sneaking suspicion that only what is left eventually comes to the waiters so I am impatient for this to happen!

Any enough of my website grumble. I have enclosed a photo of the stand at the expo.

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