Last week Clive Hamilton’s Crikey piece criticised GetUp’s political strategy on climate change, making two main assertions: firstly, that GetUp’s current campaign is misplaced; secondly, that individual action to reduce emissions “would have virtually no effect”.
So we’re willing to lay our strategy on the table — GetUp is trying to ensure that Australia is not a blocker in international climate negotiations in Copenhagen this December.
Why? Because Australian diplomats are influential and in the past have demonstrated an outstanding ability to deliver on destructive briefs provided to them by their political bosses. Under the Howard Government they were, of course, damaging to Kyoto negotiations. Last year, the Australian negotiating team exhibited another ignoble performance in Poznan.
It is vital therefore that Australian diplomats are not given a harmful scheme and a weak target to spruik this December. If they are, they’ll do a stellar job, once again, at blocking the strong international deal we need for global targets in line with recent climate science.
The most important debate we need to have at the moment, as Clive correctly points out, is about the Rudd Government’s weak emission reduction targets. 5-15% is a carbon cop out, and of course GetUp will continue to campaign for stronger targets in line with Australia’s global responsibilities.
But we can not let the Government get away with everything else that’s wrong with the CPRS by ignoring design flaws in the scheme. We’ve heard that Australian companies are already being hired as consultants internationally, assisting with the development of other emissions trading schemes around the world.
Fixing the design flaws to recognise Government driven complementary measures will allow Australia to sign on to a stronger international target, rather than limiting us to a position that we know is too weak.
To argue against the recognition of additional action in our Emissions Trading Scheme is to suggest that extra individual and Government action (such as the mass roll out of green buildings, public transport, insulation or energy efficiency programs) on top of the weak 5% target is unnecessary. An ETS alone will not solve the climate crisis.
We agree with Clive that Australians should demand a stronger emissions reduction target. It was disappointing that his article selectively ignored a solid year of GetUp campaigning to that end.
Some of the more high-profile points in our targets campaign have included a TV ad broadcast nationally in response to the targets announcement; a 100,000 strong petition calling for strong targets; mobile billboards outside The Lodge; full-page newspaper ads calling for strong targets to renew our economy and boost green jobs; and grassroots community actions in over 120 locations calling for a 50% by 2020 carbon reduction cut as part of GetUp’s National Climate Torch Relay.
Part of GetUp’s strategy, as Clive points to, is to support progressive voices, wherever they may come from. Malcolm Turnbull’s entry into the debate on climate solutions is a positive one. Turnbull is far from getting his climate policy right yet, but his commitment to support a stronger target than the Rudd Government is important. No political party should have an automatic monopoly on the climate vote (even the Greens). Why shouldn’t Australia end up with a situation like the UK, when the Tories and Labor out-bid each other in pursuit of the climate vote?
As a people powered movement, GetUp will continue to respond to the voices of our members. Those voices are telling us that there is a huge amount of anger and disappointment amongst a growing number of Australians who feel betrayed on climate change promises. They care about the incredibly weak targets, and the badly-designed scheme, because they know, like Clive, that we are running out of time to solve climate change.
Can GetUp please explain in detail what has changed in the thermodynamics of carbon dioxide that results in the large swings in ‘global’ temperatures so vigorously championed? This is significant given that the temperature forcing of carbon dioxide decreases logarithmically with increasing concentration, and that any such induced variability at current and higher concentrations are likely to be indistinguishable from natural variability due to other natural mechanisms.
The greatest test of the efficacy of the government’s CPRS is measured by the amount of vociferous opposition of Big Carb to their poilicies in the media. High levels of noise indicate an effective CPRS, low levels indicate business as usual. There has been no noise apart from the “we need to delay it” . The only conclusion that can be drawn from a reading of the actual policy and the lack of Big Carb noise is that the policy is useless. It should not get throught the Senate. It is a crock. Get-Up is right on the money!
I now see Rudd as a person similar to a Tabacco executive. No causal links and it’s all legal. Tell that to your kids.
I’m wondering what CH thinks the net filtering proposal is doing for online critical mass and unity to tackle climate change policy backsliding. After all isn’t it the online folks collectively that changed USA politics with the election of Obama? Might CH be better off parking his agenda with Conroy et al on net filtering until this Copenhagen round is sorted. You know, to keep the peace and capacity build on campaigning?
By the way the reason the UK have bipartisan upward rivalry is because it’s a fairly small island and they can foresee it drowning whereas Australians like doubting Thomas won’t ever believe until the ice caps are irreversibly melting. Now that’s what I call a immigration programme to make current record levels of inflow here look like ….. a suburb of London.
I mean these eco-dunces are not fit to manage the country let alone the planet. They can’t fathom how 35% loss of calcified carapace of icey ocean micro critters (!) can have any real effect on society. And yet they will:
ABC AM 9 March 2009:
http://www.abc.net.au/am/content/2008/s2510740.htm
That’s the bother with ecology – it’s all connected and we to it.