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Tuesday, 29 July 2014
UN scores Australia high for quality of life but low on climate change progress
The repeal of the carbon price and efforts
to reduce our renewable energy target are not a good look. Photograph:
Angela Harper/AAP
Australia’s position as one of the best places in the world to live
was reaffirmed last week with the release of the 2014 United Nations Human Development Report, which saw Australia ranked second only to Norway among all nations in the world.
The
report, conducted by the UN Development Report Office, measures each
nation against a number of criteria, including income, health, education
and gender equality to rank 187 nations according to the Human
Development Index (HDI).
Australia’s second ranking is not surprising. Not just because other measures such as the OECD’s Better life Index
rank Australia as first, but because since 1998 Australia has been
ranked in the top five nations on the HDI. Only Norway has had a longer
run in the top five.
The report also examines environmental factors, such as depletion of
forests and withdrawal of the nation’s fresh water supply. It notes that
“climate change poses grave risks to all people and all countries” and
that “between 2000 and 2012 more than 200 million people, most of them
in developing countries, were hit by natural disasters every year,
especially by floods and droughts”.
On this score Australia has a
fair bit to be embarrassed about. In 2012, among the 25 most developed
nations, Australia was among the lowest users of renewable energy and
had the third highest emissions of CO2 per capita:
Environmental indicators
All figures from 2012. Renewable energy excludes nuclear poweer
The report notes that “no country anywhere will be immune to the
long-term effects of climate change” and that the way the world tackles
climate change ... “can be critically important for reducing the
frequency and magnitude of [developmental] shocks”.
So while
our overall HDI score suggests we are leading the way, given the repeal
of the carbon price and moves to weaken or remove the renewable energy
target, the way Australia is tackling climate change is certainly not
something the world should follow.
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