We need to fight for 2030 climate targets

October 29, 2020
Issue 
Graphic: Duncan Roden

A from The Australia Institute (TAI) has found that popular support for meaningful climate action has increased in the last 12 months.

TAI鈥檚 Climate and Energy Director Richie Merzian said: 鈥淥ur research shows that far from dampening the call for climate action, the COVID-19 crisis has strengthened Australians鈥 resolve for all levels of government to take action on climate change.鈥

Eight in ten Australians (82%) are 鈥渃oncerned that climate change will result in more bushfires鈥, 83% want coal-fired power stations 鈥渢o be phased out鈥 and the majority (59%) prefer investment in renewables over fossil fuels, including gas.

Yet, in the lead up to the Queensland election, the Liberal National Party has been if they are elected.

Labor鈥檚 federal leader Anthony Albanese is also that his party will abandon the 2030 targets it took to the last election.

Shadow resources minister Joel Fitzgibbon has that 2030 targets are now 鈥渋rrelevant鈥!

In fact, the opposite is true.

Mid-century targets are virtually meaningless because, currently, MPs and governments cannot be held accountable for breaching them.

Action to reduce emissions is needed now 鈥 not in 30 years!

鈥淪cientists tell us that what we do right now, and in the next few years, is what really matters,鈥 said in Climate Code Red.

The reality is that for more than 30 years, the record of official government climate policy shows it has been .

Divisions in the federal Labor Party over climate policy are . There are also within the Coalition. (The are another reflection of this.)

Even the big capital is split. On October 7, BHP and Origin Energy in the Queensland Resources Council over the latter鈥檚 decision to campaign hard against the Greens.

All these tensions are a reflection of a real and insoluble contradiction faced by the ruling class.

On the one hand, climate change is not only real, it is serious: people are increasingly concerned and want action, as the TAI survey reaffirms.

On the other, the 100 corporations responsible for 71% of global emissions have literally tens of billions of dollars invested in the industry. The dynamics of the capitalist system make it imperative for those companies to try to realise maximum profits on those investments.

It is not hyperbole to suggest that the survival of human civilisation is a lower priority for these bloodsuckers.

The fossil-fuel mafia are a major component of the ruling class, so both capitalist parties of government defend their interests.

This is the contradiction that leads to Labor walking both sides of the street.

In the Queensland elections, Labor is a policy to develop renewable energy in聽 Brisbane. In north Queensland, it is its support for the opening of many new coal mines.

While the Annastacia Palaszczuk Labor government is supposedly aiming for 50% renewable energy by 2030, it is 鈥溾 of meeting this goal. In fact, the goal is woefully inadequate: by comparison, South Australia is aiming for 100% over the same period.

But, whether they meet it, or not, is kind of a side show to the real issue: coal and gas exports.

鈥淨ueensland exported around 226 million tonnes of coal last year,鈥 Greens councillor Jonathan Sri on October 20. 鈥淚n contrast, Queensland鈥檚 domestic consumption of coal is only around 25 million tonnes per year.鈥

In July, Australia also overtook Qatar to become the 鈥 around 鈥 according to the Climate Council.

Viewed this way, it is clear that Labor鈥檚 talking up of renewable energy is a relatively cheap way to appear to address the popular demand for climate action without breaking from its support for the corporate polluters.

The postponement for a year of the United Nations climate summit (COP26) to next November is a further unforgivable delay by global governments.

Australia 鈥 and other countries 鈥 should take unilateral action to reduce emissions now without waiting for international agreements (the Paris agreement is also voluntary).

However, this won鈥檛 happen without a popular revolt against Labor and Liberal governments 鈥 servants of the corporate polluters.

There is a pathway out of this mess, and Socialist Alliance wants to help advance it.

To be successful, however, it has to involve masses of people organising together in a sustained way: that is the only way to mount the sort of pressure needed for governments to change course. This mass action strategy can also help prepare the way for a genuine democratic and socialist reorganisation of society.

[Alex Bainbridge is the national convenor of the .]

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