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POSITIVE NEWS - What went right this week: Wales’ ‘basic income’, plus more positive news

Posted 18th February 2022 • Written by www.positive.news •

Wales announced a basic income for vulnerable young people, renewables defeated Australia’s largest coal plant, and Belgians won the right to a four-day week, plus more positive news

Wales announced a basic income experiment

Young people leaving care face many challenges, chief among them becoming financially stable. Does Wales have a solution? 

This week, its government announced plans to trial a basic income targeted at vulnerable young adults. Under the scheme, every 18-year-old leaving care within a 12-month period will be paid £1,600 a month, regardless of their employment status. The payments will continue for two years. 

Social justice minister Jane Hutt said the scheme would “deliver financial stability for a generation of young people that need it most”. Critics questioned the virtues of giving large sums of money to vulnerable individuals, and said the payments would disincentivise work. A start date for the scheme is to be confirmed. 

Malcolm Torry, general manager of the Basic Income Earth Network, disputed this. He told Positive News that basic income experiments in Finland, Namibia and India actually increased employment activity.

Renewables sunk Australia’s largest coal plant

The largest coal-fired power plant in Australia will close seven years early because it can’t compete with renewables, its operator said this week.

Australia has doggedly stuck with the dirtiest fossil fuel despite the unfolding climate crisis. In 2017, the Australian prime minister Scott Morisson, then treasurer, brought a lump of coal into parliament, where he cooed about its “energy competitive advantage”. 

That advantage has now gone up in smoke, according to Origin Energy, which runs the Eraring Power Station. “The economics of coal-fired power stations are being put under increasing, unsustainable pressure by cleaner and lower-cost generation, including solar, wind and batteries,” conceded CEO Frank Calabria. 

Origin said that Eraring (pictured) will close in 2025, seven years ahead of schedule. In a symbolic move, the site could be used to store electricity – much of it generated from renewables. 

Scientists mapped the world’s ‘whale superhighways’

Scientists have created a map of “whale superhighways” to help protect the animals on key migratory routes.

Whales encounter many threats as they navigate the oceans, including container ships, seismic surveys and fishing nets. The latter alone kills around 300,000 whales, dolphins and purposes annually, according to the WWF. 

The new map could help. Based on tracking data collected from 900 whales, it has identified critical migratory routes that could help inform conservation strategies.

Dr Margaret Kinnard, from the WWF, which conducted the research, said: “This report presents some of the most comprehensive data to date on large scale movements of whales through the world’s oceans. The emerging picture underscores the need for swift, concerted action.” 

Belgians won the right to a four-day week

Belgian workers are to be given the right to request a four-day week, it was announced this week. It comes a fortnight after Belgian civil servants won the ‘right to disconnect’ from their jobs.  

Employees will be able to put in a request to work longer hours during the week, in exchange for a three-day weekend. Pay would be unaffected. Though firms have the right to turn down requests, they will be required to justify their response in writing. 

“The goal is to give people and companies more freedom to arrange their work time,” said Belgian prime minister Alexander De Croo. 

The pandemic has sparked growing interest in a shorter working week. The UK is set to trial a four-day week this summer, while firms such as Unilever have launched their own pilots.

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