This week should have been a target-rich environment for Labor.
There was the government’s reluctance to say anything about Trump’s attempted coup.
There was Four Corners‘ exposure of Alan Tudge and Christian Porter, and David Crowe’s revelation of Rachelle Miller’s complaints about Tudge and Michaelia Cash.
There was Morrison’s slashing of the JobSeeker supplement. And the AFP Association delivering a ferocious assault to Christian Porter’s joke of an integrity body, pointing out there was one much tougher rule for police and one much softer rule for politicians.
Instead, Joel Fitzgibbon made sure the whole week was about him and his slightly premature departure from the Labor frontbench, over Anthony Albanese, and the bulk of the party, getting sick of his constant disruption in the interests of fossil fuel companies.
It even managed to set leadership hares running — something admittedly not difficult for a press gallery that will take personalities over policies, and a leadership yarn over the climate crisis, every single time.
But political journalists aren’t making up Fitzgibbon’s behaviour, nor that of some Labor MPs who have also bought the fossil fuel company line, nor that of union opponents of effective climate action, the mining divisions of the CFMEU and the AWU.
As the Liberals demonstrated before the last election, profound divisions and leadership spills are no impediment to holding office. But the sabotage of what under virtually any other circumstances should have been a strong week for Labor augurs ill for a party that must work in the political shadow of the pandemic, and a government spending a quarter of a trillion dollars in economic pump priming.
What’s all the more extraordinary are the small stakes at play in this issue. This is not a great brawl over industry policy and the role and form of industrial protectionism. This is a brawl over an issue that has already been decided, by the industry itself.
Thermal coal is in its death throes, here and elsewhere. Not a week, sometimes not even a day, goes by without further evidence that thermal coal has little present and no future.
Just this week, Appalachian coal major Contura Energy — itself the product of a bankrupt predecessor — paid another company $50 million to take its Cumberland mine in Pennsylvania off its hands, along with the massive reclamation costs that come with it.
Reclamation costs are going to be a huge issue as we work through the death of thermal coal — large companies will be eager to be rid of the costs of restoring landscapes mutilated by, in many cases, decades of mining, and may look to bankruptcy as a mechanism to hand the costs off to taxpayers.
US coal giant Peabody, which operates in the Hunter Valley, has already flagged it may re-enter bankruptcy given its $1.6 billion debt.
Meanwhile, Siemens Energy and Toshiba have both announced they are abandoning the production of coal-fired generators — not merely in response to investor pressure but the reality of a diminishing market for coal-fired plants. Toshiba instead is ploughing hundreds of trillions of yen into renewable energy.
That investment reflects one of the core falsehoods peddled by opponents of climate action on both sides of politics — that it’s either jobs or effective climate action. As the massive increase in renewables investment demonstrates, energy is an enormous opportunity for “jobs and growth”.
Smart politicians, like NSW Liberal Matt Kean, get that it’s less about the death of thermal coal and more about the birth of a renewables-dominated energy market.
Dumb politicians and union leaders spit the dummy — and hand the climate denialists on the other side of politics a win.
Joel sat on a comfortable margin before the last election and was rarely heard of by his electorate. Then he almost lost his seat to One Nation, which registered its highest vote anywhere in the country. Joel is not so much concerned about mining companies, maybe some about the miners, but mostly about his job. Labor may well have to let go of Hunter for a while, but will not get away with walking both sides of the street on climate. It didn’t work last time and it won’t in the future.
I sometimes wonder who Joel really is working for. One Nation voters are ot necessarily coal miners. It seems than after 24 years that Joel has not been working close to his electorate for many years. He is really past his used by date and probably far too late to do the work in his electorate such as happened in Gilmore and Eden Monaro which were marginal seats
I think that’s what forgotten with Fitzgibbon. He was/is like Feeney in Batman/Cooper. Did nothing for a decade and nearly lost the seat to the Green’s and then blamed everyone else but himself.
I think that the next two announcements from JF will be when he quits parliament next year and when he joins a major fossil fuel company, also next year.
Or even the Liberal party; Fitz’s joining it, that is, before he leaves the parliament either voluntarily or unceremoniously by courtesy of the electorate.
In the Qld state election we heard nada from One Nation and Clive Palmer’s latest party got 0.61% of the vote.
Why? The Labor party stopped playing nice hoping the Facebook believers would understand the stupid “no oxygen theory”.
They actually called Palmer out, as a liar regarding the “Death tax” that never was and probably will never be. Palmer, Joh’s old spin doctor has lost his credibility.
One Nation raised money on the pretext of a High Court challenge to Queensland’s closed border and then realized that the general population was comfortable with them leaving and not returning.
Why this background? Joel Fitzgibbons will discover that the coal mines and miners and the CFMMEU, he thinks he represents are going to turn on him when they realize that the Bravus (Adani by another name) mine is completely automated, There will be no jobs and no water and no market for the coal from the Hunter as they have never given up their plans for being the biggest thermal coal mine.
Bravus, in pig Latin apparently means corrupted. How apt!!
Nothing new in this contribution.
Labor & the unions should address the issue of employment for the people who are going to be affected by coal’s demise. Education will be required.
Fitzgibbon should be taken in hand by whatever means necessary. At best he’s looking after himself, more likely actively working to damage the party’s standing as he did with Gillard.
How all this is done in the perennially hostile media climate Labor faces is a problem. A big one.
Fitzgibbon’s either thick, or being completely dishonest and disingenuous.
Just over 12 months ago, in the Newcastle Herald, a piece headed;
“Billions of dollars worth of large-scale renewable energy are in the pipeline across the Hunter
Renew Economy in Sept, headed;
“Hunter region coal cities join national climate network, shift to solar and EV’s”
Which opens with;
“Seven out of 10 local governments in New South Wales’ coal producing heartland, the Hunter Valley, have signed up as members of Australia’s largest local government climate network, the Cities Power Partnership, after three new councils signed up to the initiative.
Lake Macquarie City Council, Port Stephens Council and Cessnock City Council on Thursday revealed that they had taken membership in the CPP, joining existing Hunter region members, MidCoast Council, Upper Hunter Shire Council, Muswellbrook Shire and City of Newcastle.
The network of more than 129 councils from across the country, representing almost 11 million Australians, requires participating councils to make five action pledges in either renewable energy, efficiency, transport or working in partnership to tackle climate change….”
This information is everywhere, but ignored by those operating at the highest level of government i.e. the Federal level.
And, that includes the rubbish in the ‘Press Gallery’.
“Fitzgibbon’s either thick, or being completely dishonest and disingenuous.”
Don’t rule out thick and completely dishonest and disingenuous.
Yes, error, that. ‘And/or’ most appropriate, Rat.
In 2018 there were approximately 35,000 people employed in the coal industry, less than 0.3% of the people employed in Australia. The flow on numbers are too rubbery to use reliably, usually inflated by pro opinions and discounted by anti – opinions. Although it is difficult to determine the full extent of the subsidies, since some are not direct, the coal industry has been propped up for years while, on the other hand, the LNP saw fit to scrap the Australian car industry, or what was left of it, perhaps because the subsidies were becoming a problem and didn’t return enough to the LNP to warrant protecting the 40,000 odd jobs estimated to have been lost with the demise of that industry.
Very few of those people moved on to ‘better’ jobs as suggested by our dear ex prime minister Abbott and education isn’t enough when you have to move and change mental gears to the extent required when an industry dies. Coal mining will diminish and Australia must both act sensibly and proactively or the repercussions will likely be painful.
Just another chapter in the shrinking of Canberra’s policy nous and ambition. We have returned to the 1930s, when most major policy was created by state governments.
We have now had three prime ministers with zero policy achievements between them, even Fraser and Howard managed a few of those. Meanwhile federal Labor has joined the government, jointly subsiding to irrelevance.
This again shows that incumbency trumps all other issues for Laberil otherwise they would jettison this troglodyte . The BoM and CSRIO came out today out to state that we are hares breath away from the ominous 1.5c where the spectre of feedback loops may make all future attempts to remedy the situation futile. Where Northern European scientists have, for the first time, detected methane bubbling up from the vast depths of the arctic. The last time this happened the planet was unlivable for all terrestrial creatures.
That Annastacia Palaszczuk, of the I have never seen a coal mine I didn’t like, is lorded as the most successful Queensland Laberil ever.This is why this troglodyte is still in the party.
Christ take your pills mate
Well thought out and thorough reply, made me think ????
I shall be using “hares breath” as a measurement from now on, so much more creative than the original!
Sorry Beth, I blundered in before seeing yours.
It is truly delightful phrase so thanks to Mark.
Even if it was autocorrect, 10+ points for “<I>..we are hare’s breath away from…</I>”.
A fine, evocative new metric worthy of wider use.
Oh I think you said it better Indunn!! Not a blunder an improvement! 🙂
Fitzgibbon’s behaviour is not just corrosively and unproductively divisive, it is pathologically stupid. He is peddling arguments that may have held some water 10 years ago (they did not then, but there was a sliver of economic uncertainty that sustained those arguments back then). But now it is obvious that acting on climate change is the most fertile economic, social and environmental opportunity presented to Australia since the 32 years after the end of WW2. Fitzgibbon, basing his nonsense on a deliberately narrow policy analysis of 3 federal elections; ie climate and energy, ignores all other factors because his perspective is from the bottom of a pit in the Hunter Valley.
Fitzbibbon is also stupid because he is ignoring the fact that only Labor can reconcile the hastened demise of fossil fuels with short-sighted CFMMEU demands. Only Labor can convince the CFMMEU that its members in coal, gas and oil can be easily transitioned to new opportunities.
Fitzgibbon is a dinosaur whose political prospects he himself is destroying, not helping. The tragedy is the damage he is prepared to do for his misconceived crusade, much like the idiot currently in the White House.
It is highly unlikely that Fritzgibbet’s “… perspective is from the bottom of a pit in the Hunter Valley.”.
Maybe from the directors’ boardroom overlooking the tailling waste heaps.
More likely the CEO’s dining suite overlooking the Harbour.
Fair point.