Most Australians — over 60% of them, according to one poll — believe in climate change and the need to take action to address it. But extreme weather tends to increase that concern.
While hardcore denialists don’t shift their views and tend to explain away even record heat events — a Bureau of Meteorology conspiracy etc — “undecided” people are swayed by extreme weather. This has been established in polling for a number of years: not merely does direct experience of extreme weather affect people’s views about the existence of anthropogenic climate change, non-aligned voters are likely to express concern about climate change in response to warm weather.
The last six months have therefore been very difficult for climate denialists. Climate change re-emerged as a high-profile and intractably divisive issue in the Liberal Party’s civil war after what was ostensibly a denialist victory in the ouster of Malcolm Turnbull in August. Climate change, along with asylum seekers, was front and centre in the Liberals’ ensuing loss of Turnbull’s seat. While the voters of Wentworth were dismissed as atypical of the famed “Liberal Party base”, in fact more than 40% of Liberal voters believe Australia is not doing enough about climate change, as part of an overall 50+% of voters who feel the same.
Australia’s record hot summer of 2018-19 — on top of an extended drought in parts of eastern Australia — came on top of this pushback against denialism, making it increasingly unviable for a major party to reject action — or at least perceived action — on climate change. For the moment, no credible politician can afford to refuse to at least pretend to take the issue seriously. That’s why Prime Minister Scott Morrison has abandoned his false claim that Australia will meet Tony Abbott’s unambitious Paris Agreement targets “in a canter” in favour of new spending on climate action.
Morrison recently announced he was directing $3 billion into pumped hydro projects and further funding for Tony Abbott’s “Direct Action” fund. The latter is a program discredited even within Liberal ranks — its funding was dramatically slashed once the Coalition was elected in 2013 — and primarily used to direct grants to Nationals voters in regional areas, with no identified permanent carbon abatement benefits; a coal-fired power plant controlled by a Queensland LNP figure has even sought funding from it.
But even rank denialists like Abbott have been forced to adjust their position. Facing a significant threat in his own seat in the coming election, Abbott had yet again reversed his position on the Paris Agreement, which he committed Australia to ostentatiously in 2015 (“when we make commitments to reduce emissions we keep them”), then demanded we withdraw from in 2018, and now says we should remain in. This more or less completes the circle for Abbott, who has literally held every position on both climate change and climate action that it is possible to have over the last 10 years.
If Abbott’s backflip is unconvincing — ludicrous, even — how much more convincing is Morrison’s belated conversion, as a man who famously brought a lump of coal into question time? The government’s policy incoherence on energy — it literally has no policy on the subject, for fear of alienating denialists, Nationals or moderates — doesn’t help answer the question, except in the negative.
But adding to the Coalition’s electoral problem is the accelerating drift of the government’s traditional business supporters toward climate action. Over 100 major banks, development banks and insurers around the world are now refusing to lend for or cover coal projects (despite the government’s efforts to find foreign finance for Adani’s Carmichael project); investors are switching to renewable power generation, Australia’s biggest coal company Glencore giving in to pressure to cap its coal production and there is a rising level of aggression from business leaders toward the government’s refusal to take climate change seriously.
This has all been complemented by a more rigorous stance by business regulators over the issue: APRA, ASIC and, most recently, the Reserve Bank have all made clear that climate risks must be explicitly addressed in risk management, disclosure and financial stability analysis. For large companies, climate change and its risks are now part of the governance framework within which they must operate.
There is no guarantee the current electoral mood will last; a cooler summer, an economic downturn, may in the future distract voters from the ever more worried forecasts of climate scientists. And business is driven by perceived self-interest, not conviction. But recent months have the sense of a tipping point: action on climate change is now a sine qua non of mainstream politics in Australia. The question is, whether vested interests can slow down and stymie action to the absolute minimum, or genuinely effective action on climate change will emerge for the first time in Australia since 2014.
This piece is part of our dedicated climate change series, Slow Burn. Read the rest here.
While there are foolish people imagining that renewables can replace fossil fuels, Tony Abbott will continue to have a conservative audience, satirising us as superstitious people sacrificing goats to appease the climate gods. We should instead be appealing to his audience that we should move to “sustainable energy”. Quite what that is to be would be a far more productive debate than continuing to assert the religious notion that the world is running out of stuff.
Given the incredible monetary cost of building nuclear power stations, the environmental & energy costs of extracting & enriching uranium, the limited nature of uranium as a fuel & the proven inability of nuclear power to cope with extreme heat……I am curious how you can continue to espouse the myth that nuclear power is “sustainable”.
Marcus, I didn’t mention nuclear at all, but yes it is the most sustainable source of massive power. Repeat production is making them them as cheap as coal power stations, and their fuel is in overwhelmingly inexhaustible supply. Yes their steam requires cooling, which is easy on the coast. Inland they can use air cooling, a proven technology. Unlike other steam generators, they can use all of their heat in distillation desalination, which the inland sorely needs. So thank you for mentioning it, we have to accept that nuclear is the only heavyweight sustainable power able to decarbonise Australia.
Without imagination, there can be no progress.
The real problem, created by those without imagination, is that today’s state of affairs in terms of technology and industry is somehow the ultimate.
You must always remember that it once was the firm conviction that heavier-than-air machines could never fly and that imagining otherwise was the equivalent of thinking that one could fly to the moon.
Don’t knock the dreamers, for they hold the foundations of the future.
You better tell all the national market bodies, engineers, system modellers, analysts and well, pretty much every investor in the energy sector, because they seem to think that aside from a marginal and decreasing role for gas in managing peak demand, a high penetration of geographically dispersed renewables backed up by sufficient firming and security/stability services can easily power Australia by the middle of the century.
Crazy to think they’re all wrong.
And since you’re obviously a strong proponent of abundance theory, Australia does indeed have the luxury of abundant resources and a large land mass, so plenty of room for all those solar panels and turbines we’re going to build and no need for interconnection with other countries.
“While there are foolish people imagining that renewables can replace fossil fuels”
Laughable response Roger. All those engineers, scientists, academics who just don’t understand the reality of your position. Fools, all of them.
The LNP conservative wing really needs to do some more reading.
It would be foolish for Australia not to anticipate a collapse in the coal mining industry as demand for coal drops worldwide. Coal power is becoming a pariah world wide. The cheapest economic and political option is now renewable sources plus physical storage (eg: pumped hydro).
Why not invest our present day windfall profits from coal mining into infrastructure supporting renewable energy? Smart grids, transmission lines to renewable sources, and feasibility studies for hydro storage would be on the top of my list.
Coal fueled fossilised denialism – for as long as Ol’ King Coal can keep up the payments.
Whatis it about the electorate of Warringah that they consistently vote for Tony Abbott. Apparently people like the monster. I dare say they liked the Pied Piper as he led the citizens of Hamlyn.
Totally agree, bu I also feel the same about all of the ‘confused’ (?) people who vote for Barnaby, (Or almost any other Nationals parasite)
It’s an ego thing, they have a feeling they are privy to a special knowledge that only Abbott and his supporters have but if questioned would be unable to say what it actually is. A fog of status, of superiority over the rest of us but deluded just the same. Same with Barnaby but more rural.
Only when he led the rats – they were more than miffed when he led the kids.
The Western Australian EPA has recently adopted a policy requiring its oil and gas industry to provide offsets for their greenhouse gas emissions.
These mostly foreign owned vested interests are as usual, spending a fortune on advertising opposing this policy by falsely forecasting the end of mining investment and the loss of thousands of jobs; and the WA Government is showing every sign of letting them get away with it!
This time, Mr Simon Homes a Court has crunched the figures and shown that the real effect on profitability is miniscule, less than 0.2% of profits!
It is about time that our Governments stood up to these vested interests and started to govern in the interest of the Australian public.
Ban Rhinohide from getting on the back of a ute, wearing (designer) jeans & Akubra.
Congratulations on using the correct poster boy for this piece.
Tony Abbott has been the equivalent of a ball & chain on Oz taking any remedial steps. Imagine if Turnbull hadn’t been rolled back in 2009, Rudd would’ve delivered an ETS in early 2010. I was present at Parliament House on the day when the former Opposition Leader, Turnbull, crossed the floor to vote with the Rudd government. By then the Opposition was in the squirrel grip of Abbott, he had the numbers in the Senate (along with crossbenchers) to defeat the Bill.
Had it not been for Abbott the system could’ve been operating for the past 9 years. We will not get those years back.
Depressingly, no we won’t and the exponential increase in the harm occurring and accruing on a daily basis is truly alarming and we are still the dumbest nation on the planet! The lost opportunities! it really is mind-blowing that any opposition or question is published as equal- time is beyond cognitive dissonance!
Sorry to depress you further GF50.
I have dug up a couple of pertinent quotes that have helped keep me focused on where we are going and where we should be going.
One I still recall, my economics lecturer announced to our class in the ’60’s was from Kenneth Boulding, an environment advisor to President Kennedy.
“Anyone who believes in indefinite growth of anything physical on a physically finite planet is either a madman or an economist”.
The other from James Lovelock.
“Those who fail to see population growth and climate change are two sides of the same coin are either ignorant or hiding from the truth. These two huge environmental problems are inseparable and to discuss one while ignoring the other is irrational”.
If we don’t get our act together, according to the IPCC, we have approximately a decade before we reach the tipping point and we only get one chance to find reverse gear !
The sooner we rid ourselves of the Abbott’s of this world and their wrecking balls, the greater the chance of correction. However I fear that that other side of the coin, population growth, will be our greatest challenge.