The federal government has delivered another budget for the billionaire class that is hell-bent on putting their profits ahead of the climate emergency, writes Peter Boyle.
Carbon emissions and reduction targets
Pressure from the Biden administration鈥檚 pledges on swift climate change action seems to have pushed Scott Morrison to mention he indeed has聽a plan to reduce emissions, writes Pip Hinman.
Prime Minister Scott Morrison is fond of saying that Australia only produces 1.3% of global greenhouse emissions. He says this to bolster his climate denialist position that his government does not need to take a lead on cutting carbon emissions. This position is fundamentally wrong.
Catastrophic fires in New South Wales and Queensland have come early in the fire season, which usually starts in October. Climate scientists and frontline fire fighters agree: they are a consequence of climate change.
The Australia聽Institute (TAI) released its latest annual Climate of the Nation 2019 report on September 10. The annual report, first produced by the Climate Institute and for the past two years by TAI, has been tracking attitudes on climate change for more than a decade.
UN Secretary General Ant贸nio Guterres wants only those countries that can show 鈥渃oncrete, realistic plans鈥 for reducing their carbon emissions to come the the UN climate summit in September. But you can be sure the recalcitrants, , will be there.
The climate emergency聽is already impacting all our lives. As it gets worse, we will be affected by more聽catastrophic聽floods and storms, bushfires and droughts. Globally there will be less clean water and farmland available. It is a result of an economic system 鈥 capitalism 鈥 in which private companies鈥 profit-making is privileged over the real needs of communities and their environments.
When renowned came to Australia in 2011 he observed that for most people it is 鈥渆asier to imagine the end of the world than to imagine the end of capitalism鈥.聽
Unfortunately, imagining the end of the world is getting easier. There are almost daily reports of the accumulating effects of climate change, to choose just one source of potential apocalypse.
Another United Nations climate conference (COP23) is over 鈥 though many people would have barely noticed, given the lack of media coverage. The Paris Climate Agreement is locked in and, contrary to the Coalition鈥檚 inetrpretation, Australia needs to ratchet up its emissions reduction.
This is a useful time to reflect on where Australia sits globally on climate action and what areas are of concern.
ENGIE, the French company that owns two of Victoria's coal power stations, announced on November 2 it will close the oldest, Hazelwood, by March, and is selling the other, Loy Yang B. The power stations are in the Latrobe Valley, east of Melbourne.
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