Greens leader Adam Bandt 听a congratulations message to incoming Prime Minister Anthony Albanese after the election. 鈥淲e鈥檙e looking forward to working together with you,鈥 he said. 鈥淭he crises facing us are urgent 鈥 we鈥檝e got to quit coal & gas. We鈥檝e got to fight inequality. Let鈥檚 go.鈥
Expectations are high that climate action will be on the agenda now the Coalition has been booted out.
The Australia Institute鈥檚 Ben Oquist听听there is a climate 鈥渟uper majority鈥 in parliament, potentially as big as 87 seats if Labor, Greens and the 鈥渢eal independents鈥 are all counted. (Seventy six are needed to pass legislation.)
Tim Flannery was even more effusive,听听that 鈥渃limate action is the undisputed winner of this election鈥. Further, he said, 鈥渢he Australian Parliament is now set for an unprecedented shake-up after millions of voters put climate first at the ballot box, and all eyes are on what climate action can be achieved by the incoming government鈥.
However, Labor has spent its first few days in government hosing down expectations.
罢丑别听Financial Review听听on May 23 that 鈥淟abor鈥檚 likely Minister for Climate Chris Bowen has slapped down Greens demands for a more aggressive decarbonisation pathway that would derail new mega fossil fuel investments such as Woodside鈥檚 $16.5 billion Scarborough gas project off West Australia鈥.
Before the election, Labor gave guarantees 鈥 verbally and in writing 鈥 to the fossil fuel corporations that 鈥渋t understood the importance of coal and gas to the economy鈥 and was not planning to rock the boat.
Its clear message since May 21 is that it intends to implement the policy it took to the election. That is, it is steadfastly refusing to aim for anything more ambitious 鈥 the election result suggesting such a move would be popular.
While Labor鈥檚 policy of a 43% reduction in emissions from 2005 levels by 2030 looks good compared to the Coalition鈥檚 target of a 26鈥28% cut, it is not as good as it looks.
First, relying on emission 鈥渞eductions鈥 that have already taken place are nothing more than accounting tricks. Labor is relying on emissions ,听while emissions in other sectors have grown. Labor, like the Coalition, will be claiming these 鈥渞eductions鈥 as part of the 43%.
Secondly, a key feature of Labor鈥檚 plan to 鈥渞educe鈥 emissions is to use offsets.
reported on May 24听that the 鈥減rice of Australian Carbon Credit Units has surged on the first day of trading after the federal election鈥. This means that corporate Australia recognises that there will be changes.
However, it said Labor will 鈥渞ely heavily on repurposing the Coalition鈥檚 existing Safeguards Mechanism to drive down emissions鈥. In other words, companies will be purchasing often dubious carbon 鈥渙ffsets鈥 to continue polluting instead of reducing emissions.
Thirdly, according to听, Labor鈥檚 goal is not even consistent with the Paris climate agreement. If it was fully implemented and matched around the world, it would not keep warming under 1.5掳C and 鈥 only with optimistic assumptions 鈥 might keep the world below 2掳C degrees by 2100.
People need to learn to judge Labor not by comparison with the climate-denying Coalition, but by how well it responds to the climate emergency.
After almost a decade of the pro-fossil fuel Coalition, there is a strong temptation听to give Labor 鈥渁 chance鈥 and not demand it steps up to meet the climate challenge.
Labor鈥檚 determination to push ahead with the catastrophic Scarborough Gas project, along with opening up the Beetaloo Basin in the Northern Territory, proves we cannot give it a 鈥渉oneymoon鈥.
It is good the Greens are pushing the Albanese government to 鈥減ause鈥 Scarborough and other fossil fuel developments in their early stages of development. This needs to be backed up with pressure from an emboldened grassroots climate movement.
As Socialist Alliance national co-convener Sam Wainwright told the听recent听91自拍论坛 Show:听鈥淭he change we鈥檇 need to stop runaway global warming would require a social movement on a scale that we鈥檝e never seen before in this country.鈥
The election result should give us the confidence to build such a people-powered protest movement.
Video:听Greenslide, small targets, and progressive advance | 91自拍论坛 Show #23.听.
[Alex Bainbridge is a member of the .]