“We know that there’s been a large number of bodies that have recommended an emissions intensity scheme, which is effectively a baseline and credit scheme, we’ll look at that.” Josh Frydenberg, December 5, 2016
“I didn’t mention an emissions intensity scheme.” Josh Frydenberg, December 6, 2016
Thank goodness we’re in a post-truth world, otherwise the Energy Minister might look more than a little — what was the word Greg Combet used to like? Mendacious!
In any event, it didn’t take long — 36 hours after announcing the terms of reference for the long-planned climate policy review, Frydenberg was forced by the Coalition’s right wing to kill off any suggestion it might consider any form of baseline and credit scheme, thereby ensuring that the ludicrous baseline safeguard scheme — the “safeguard” relating to safeguarding power company profits — that notionally forms part of the government’s current of climate policies will never be converted into a serious mechanism for reducing emissions. As we predicted on Monday, this government will never do anything serious on climate — the denialists within its ranks won’t allow it.
It also removes the last shred of dignity for Turnbull’s climate policy: he has ratified an international agreement to reduce our emissions by 26-28% of 2005 levels by 2030 and has nothing that will achieve even that unambitious target, and the review designed to address that problem is unable to address the most effective way of achieving it because of the power wielded by climate denialists in the Liberal Party and National Party.
[Three minutes to midnight and our politics ignores the climate threat]
That only leaves more government spending on renewables — which everyone loves, but is hardly the most efficient means of reaching the target — or dumping the problem on the politicians of the 2020s, by which point the Prime Minister will be long gone.
Frydenberg used to be in charge of the Northern Australia Infrastructure Fund when he was resources minister, and in that capacity flagged the government would look at throwing money at Adani’s rail line for the Carmichael coal line, only for Liberal director Tony Nutt to issue an election assurance that it would receive no money. Malcolm Turnbull also ruled out funding, then seemed to rule it back in again. Now Nationals minister Matt Canavan is pushing for funding, along with the Queensland Labor government. But federal Labor has now refused to back the handout — a rare case of Labor encountering a form of protectionism it didn’t like.
[Whisper it softly: is this government any better than Abbott’s?]
The common theme — apart from the Coalition’s obsession with making climate change worse rather than trying to address it — is government intervention at the expense of much-loathed market mechanisms. The hopelessly inadequate “Direct Action” — that name has been abandoned in favour of an equally misleading “Emissions Reduction Fund” — was about the triumph of bureaucratic intervention and winner-picking over far more efficient market-based price signals to reduce emissions, to suit Tony Abbott’s agenda of climate denialism with a figleaf of climate action policy. What the last 36 hours has demonstrated is that there can never be a bipartisan consensus on sensible, market-based solutions to the challenge of emission abatement, and there will be constant pressure from the right to prop up coal and other fossil fuel sources with taxpayer assistance.
The most likely outcome will be the government dumping the challenge of living up to its binding emissions abatement commitments onto its successors. Turnbull has no realistic choice if he doesn’t want to fracture his own party. The Liberals haven’t moved in climate change since 2009. And it seems they’re not likely to anytime soon.
“Jelly-roll” Josh.
Yes you have to have a backbone to be able to backflip!
And the circus master of the troupe of back flipping clowns is Cannon Ball Bernardi
Just think . . . the Australian Electorate gave up a then Gillard minority government that successfully passed over 600 items of cooperative legislation whilst under intense pressure from the Murdock Media headlined by Christopher Pyne, ‘On Water’ Morrison and Tony Abbott.
Bruised, but not denied, the Electorate backed-in Malcolm Turnbull’s coup with expectations of real change. What is the outcome . . . . lies, layered upon lies. Each year that has passed has seen more and more evidence of climate change impact allied to compounding economic disrepair. There really is . . . no one steering this ship1
Coalition are maxing out denial. A twin super cell storm hammers SA. It shuts down power to a reasonable amount of people. Then Josh Fried-den-burgered states this an infrastructure problem. Sure it may well be, but that is the case because of extreme climatic events. So Josh what do we tackle? Climate change or building extremely robust mega power supply infrastructure? Josh sits under Damocles Sword as Energy and Environment Minister. This monkey will only be able to dig a big hole to hide in. As consumers we should expect outages. I find them thrilling and a part of life. This rancid government uses an outage to justify energy security above climate security. Soon Malcolm and Josh will be handing out lollies and magic slippers.
Nothing said about the brown coal outage in Victoria that shut down the Alcoa aluminium smelter for hours, only still speaking post truths re SA outage.
I read a short article in IEEE Spectrum, yesterday, which really puts the Australian position into stark relief: http://spectrum.ieee.org/energywise/energy/renewables/germany-aggressive-switch-to-renewables-will-save-us-149-billion
“The switch to renewables in Germany is saving money and creating jobs, according to a new economic analysis by the international consulting firm PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC). The report finds that the German government’s 2015-2020 climate action plan and energy efficiency measures will save about 149 billion euros.
…
“PwC estimates that the program will also create 430,000 additional jobs.”
By contrast, here we are going cross-eyed with anticipation over two thousand possible jobs arising from digging more carbon out of the ground. It’s not as though Germany even has all that much sun.
Oh, and the analysts suggest that even so, they might not quite reach their 2020 target of 40% saving.
Reminds me Andrew . . . Given German progress with renewables and related jobs, budgetary rewards. Decades ago Lord Nicholas Stern released the first of his seminal climate change reports wherein he concluded that the earlier governments responded to climate change, the lower the cost and greater the reward.
All conservative Australian governments and rapacious industrialists since, have fought against Stern’s conclusions despite his economic eminence. They mortgage our National future.
This report comes from the IEEE which is not some left leaning green group. This is the peak international body of electrical and electronic engineers. Even when such experts tell this government what’s good for us it prefers to listen to the RWNJ fringe dwellers.
The cure will be simple: we will be left behind with our ships full of unsaleable coal and holes in the ground. We are falling over ourselves to help an Indian company (Adani) set up a giant coal mine, while the Press Information Bureau of Gov of India announced their solar targets for the next 3y – the 43GW of additional solar will produce the same electricity per year as burning all the coal produced per year from Carmichael. By 2022, they anticipate 175GW of solar ie producing 4x Carmichael per year. So why would you spend the same amount of money on a big hole in someone else’s country?
You said “The Liberals haven’t moved in climate change since 2009. ” Is that 2009 a reference to CE or BC?
So their policy is to provide ongoing support and rebates for fossil fuels that create few jobs and despoil the environment, but not provide any support for high-job high-tech and manufacturing jobs in the renewables sector where we have clear natural and scientific advantages.
And all the time not meeting a stated carbon emissions goal that is well short of what we need to be achieving.
Now that’s agile!