On Monday Scott Morrison claimed Australia’s carbon emissions will be slashed by 42% this decade — a vastly greater reduction than any Paris agreement target or the government’s own forecasts.
A 42% reduction compares with the Department of Environment’s latest projection of just a 4% reduction, from 532 million tonnes of carbon dioxide-equivalent in 2019 to 511 million tonnes in 2030.
The prime minister’s claim was absolutely extraordinary — and almost entirely ignored.
That was partly because it was made in an interview on Today where nobody was paying attention or understood what he said, but mainly because it’s clearly nonsense and he didn’t understand what he was saying either.
Morrison twice told Today our per capita emissions would fall by half between now and 2030.
“We will reduce our carbon emissions per capita by half between now and 2030,” he said.
Perhaps surprised that neither Karl Stefanovic or Allison Langdon noticed what a great talking point that was, he had another crack at it.
“Our per capita emissions will fall by half over the next 10 years.”
This does not indicate Morrison has had a change of heart about the need to reduce our carbon emissions — it indicates he had no idea of what he was talking about and, in “Scotty from marketing” mode, had run off half-cocked with a nonsense sound bite.
To help the PM understand what he said, in round numbers, our 2019 emissions divided by 25.5 million of us work out to be 20.86 tonnes each to make us about the developed world’s worst per capita carbon emitters.
Halving that per capita score would mean 10.43 tonnes each in 2030, when our population is expected to be 29.8 million, meaning total emissions of 310.8 million tonnes – some 200 million tonnes less than the Department of Environment’s best guess.
It’s not going to happen.
Morrison had more success being noticed on Tuesday when he argued hazard reduction burns could be more important than cutting carbon emissions in Australia’s future fight against bushfires.
That line was immediately attacked by critics of the government’s chain-dragging on emissions reductions.
It fits the view that the government, having been forced by the bushfires to acknowledge the seriousness of climate change, will focus on responding to its effects – stressing adaptation and resilience measures – rather than dealing with the cause of global warming.
Deflecting with an adaptation focus means the government’s close and remunerative relationship with the fossil fuel industry can continue without strain.
It allows the prime minister and his treasurer to continue to run sound bites about facing up to climate issues without taxing carbon or threatening coal mining jobs.
For those who take the climate issue seriously, such talking points mean the government doesn’t understand the problem.
Well, it is a government led by a prime minister famous for taking a lump of coal to Parliament and who claims we’re halving our per capita emissions between now and 2030.
Michael Pascoe is a contributing editor at The New Daily. This article first appeared in The New Daily.
Is it too difficult to say “Liar”? Is it too difficult for interviewers to call out “Scotty from Marketing”? Is it too difficult to denounce Morrison and his deceit in the media?
I suspect most journalists are as innumerate in statistics as he is himself. But he does have a tendency, Trump-like, to say whatever sounds good at the time.
I have the odd thought sometimes (try every time I see him) that Morrison is in fact clinically insane.
I also think that when he does and says (well says anyway … he doesn’t actually DO anything) these things he may well be trying on his Trump. Trump is clearly a great hero of his and don’t you just bet he wishes he could lie like that and get away with it.
In one other thing he is like Trump. Both are their nation’s most dangerous security risk.
You speak good Lee. Perhaps Trump and much less Morrison are just ahead of the curve, knowing that you can get away with anything these days “I just grab them on the pussy…..”
Or there was someone from history who noted that if you are going to lie, lie big.
I too think the clinically insane synopsis sounds right, but I think that of much of my fellow man.
Sad.
He’s not the first one to be moved by the goalie host.
“In one other thing he is like Trump. Both are their nation’s most dangerous security risk.”
Well, the Liberal Party is this country’s most pressing terrorist threat.
The PM’s position is like placing an ambulance at the bottom of a cliff. It may be of some help, but building a fence at the top is what will stop people from falling.
Surely even the dimmest journalist could understand this analogy and ask him (the PM) to comment.
Yes. Why does he get away with such blatant lies? “Meet and beat” our pathetic targets “at a canter”.
It’s exhausting hearing the lies over and over again, but it is even harder seeing them regurgitated in the non thinking portions of the media.
Do better than this. We are all accountable.
Sad, really.
He’s got the smoke, where are the mirrors?