Difference between revisions of "Hugh Morgan"
Bob Burton (talk | contribs) m (SW: add linl) |
m (SW: *Advisory Board, World Growth <ref>[http://www.worldgrowth.org/who/?subsec=3 Advisory Board], World Growth, accessed September 1, 2008.</ref>) |
||
Line 4: | Line 4: | ||
In 1997 "it was revealed that Western Mining Corporation had quadrupled its forward gold sales at the same time the RBA was planning to sell two thirds of its gold reserves. WMC's CEO, Hugh Morgan, was a member of the board at the time. He did not, and was not required to, absent himself from the board discussions which dealt with the gold sales." [http://afr.com/premium/articles/2005/12/08/1133829715143.html] | In 1997 "it was revealed that Western Mining Corporation had quadrupled its forward gold sales at the same time the RBA was planning to sell two thirds of its gold reserves. WMC's CEO, Hugh Morgan, was a member of the board at the time. He did not, and was not required to, absent himself from the board discussions which dealt with the gold sales." [http://afr.com/premium/articles/2005/12/08/1133829715143.html] | ||
+ | |||
+ | *Advisory Board, [[World Growth]] <ref>[http://www.worldgrowth.org/who/?subsec=3 Advisory Board], World Growth, accessed September 1, 2008.</ref> | ||
==Climate Change "Dirty Dozen"== | ==Climate Change "Dirty Dozen"== |
Revision as of 07:41, 1 September 2008
Hugh Morgan is a Member of the Board of the Reserve Bank of Australia. He was the CEO of Western Mining Corporation from 1990 to 2003, and the President of the Business Council of Australia from 2003 to 2005 [1] and is a Director of the Australian Davos Connection.
Morgan was one of the orginal funders of the Centre for Independent Studies and helped to establish the HR Nicholls Society. He has also funded the Institute of Public Affairs, sits on the board of governors for the Committee for Economic Development of Australia, and is on the Asialink Council. Morgan was also a member of the secretive neoliberal Crossroads group, which met during the early 1980s. He is a known climate change sceptic, and opponent of the Kyoto Protocol.
In 1997 "it was revealed that Western Mining Corporation had quadrupled its forward gold sales at the same time the RBA was planning to sell two thirds of its gold reserves. WMC's CEO, Hugh Morgan, was a member of the board at the time. He did not, and was not required to, absent himself from the board discussions which dealt with the gold sales." [2]
- Advisory Board, World Growth [1]
Climate Change "Dirty Dozen"
In a talk given in Australia on 20 February 2006, Clive Hamiliton (director of The Australia Institute) identifies Hugh Morgan as one of Australia's climate change "dirty dozen" (these also include: John Eyles, Ron Knapp, Alan Oxley, Peter Walsh, Meg McDonald, Barry Jones, Chris Mitchell, Ian MacFarlane, Alan Moran, Malcolm Broomhead, and John Howard):
- "As the CEO of Western Mining and a member of the Business Council of Australia, Morgan's anti-greenhouse activism reached extreme levels. He was influential in the Australian Aluminium Council and was responsible for establishing the greenhouse sceptics collected together in the Lavoisier Group. He described the AGO's four discussion papers on emissions trading as "Mein Kampf declarations" and has railed against the Kyoto Protocol as a devious plot by European bureaucrats to seize control of the Australian economy. Despite these extraordinary views Morgan has enjoyed unparalleled access to the Prime Minister." [3]
Other SourceWatch Resources
External links
- Hugh Morgan, Carbon Blackmail Doesn't Lead to Greener Future, The Australian, 10 June 2002.
- Hugh Morgan, "Attack on integrity lacks moral standing", Australian Financial Review, April 5, 2005.
- Clive Hamiliton, "The Dirty Politics of Climate Change", Speech to the Climate Change and Business Conference, 20 February, 2006.
- Cameron England , "SA Outback for nuke dump", Courier Mail, July 12, 2006.