About Peter Garrett: Peter Robert Garrett is an Australian musician, environmentalist, activist and former politician.
That was the crossover line for us, to be able to play that many shows, sell them out real quick and have that tribe queue up outside and still be a mystery to everybody else.
As far as performance, the roar of the crowd, the smell of the greasepaint no I don't feel that.
In particular, Australia, because of its ancient geography, soil profile and distinctive weather patterns, is more adversely affected by climate variability than some other continents.
The Capitol was an occasion where you arrive at a sign in the road that says you have arrived at a place you may not have expected to be, but you know how you got here: Next!
Recently though, our State Governments have discussed instigating a carbon trading scheme - the details are still to be decided - and that's an encouraging sign.
At an everyday level I would reckon myself more than fortunate.
And living in Australia I am relatively well off.
I don't blame my own parents for the way I grew up, as quite often there is little choice in these issues.
The place where the system and people's intentions meet is the political arena.
Our senses convey that all is not well with the natural world.
I believe the divine is part of the world, not in a pantheistic way but by way of the movement of the Spirit.
What generally happens in this county is that our politicians don't serve us well because they don't tell the truth, and they don't keep their promises.
There are a range of associated impacts related to increasing temperatures which affect both evaporation rates and river systems, which are already over stressed, and these will hit farming communities and the health of crop lands.
Look, very clearly there are things that need to be done urgently in relation to climate change, and of those the most obvious is to have an enforceable and equitable arrangement delivering deep cuts in emissions into the middle of the century.
Climate change is such a huge issue that it requires strong, concerted, consistent and enduring action by governments.
It's absolutely not acceptable for people to argue that, if we are going to do anything about climate change at all, well, the responsibility lies solely with the individual.
The forces that are in play on climate change essentially revolve around the generation of power, the transportation of goods and services and people, and the sorts of materials that we use to fuel the whole of our civilisation.
And given that there's been probably a ten-fold amount of information about terrorism through the media than there has about climate change; I think that's quite an interesting statistic.
Climate change is also clearly a matter of huge interest and concern for the scientific community.
Once you start to look into the guts of climate change you find that just about every scientific institution in the world is conducting research on the issue.