Media Release
Mark Butler MP.
Shadow Minister for Environment
Climate Change and Water
Date: 11 June 2015
While federal Environment Minister Greg
Hunt tried to resurrect Tony Abbott’s favourite scare campaign in his
Talking Point article (Mercury, May 26), his department fronted Senate
Estimates hearings to expose Mr Abbott’s own carbon tax — the highest in
the world.
Confirming what Labor and analysts have long
been saying of the Emissions Reduction Fund, Clean Energy Regulator
chief executive Chloe Munro said that of the 44.4 million tonnes of
carbon abatement purchased in the first round of the ERF auction 34.4
million tonnes were from pre-existing projects.
So, in actual fact, Mr Hunt spent $660
million of taxpayers’ money to buy just 10 million tonnes of carbon
abatement, at $66 per tonne.
To use his word, Mr Hunt’s deception is “stunning”.
One main beneficiary of ERF funding is AGL,
Australia’s biggest polluter. It received taxpayers’ money to undertake
landfill gas projects that, in many cases, have been operating for 10
years.
At the same time, AGL is free to increase its
carbon pollution from other arms of its business, such as the
coal-fired generators, because Mr Abbott repealed the legal cap on
carbon pollution that would have restrained this.
Mr Abbott prosecuted the most mendacious and
relentless scare campaign in Australia’s history when he criticised
Labor’s Clean Energy Package as a “wrecking ball through the economy”.
None of the doomsday scenarios he predicted –
ranging from the ridiculous (“$100 roast lambs”) to the laughable
(“Whyalla wipe out”) – eventuated.
Australian families are still waiting for
their promised $550. Instead, Mr Abbott’s cruel cuts to family payments
in this year’s Budget will take about $6000 that families will need to
cover.
Mr Abbott’s alternative policy of paying big
polluters to do things they were already doing has been lambasted by
analysts as woefully inadequate.
The first ERF auction used a quarter of the
available funds to achieve less than 15 per cent of the abatement
required to meet Australia’s emissions reduction target of 5 per cent on
2000 levels.
And that’s assuming those contracts do as
they are intended – currently, there’s no way of monitoring that as the
Government has not finalised its safeguards mechanism yet.
Following the release of the auction results, the Grattan Institute said Direct Action was “not fit for purpose”.
The Australian Industry Group said the
Government would need to increase its budget from $2.55 billion to $20
billion just to meet the 5 per cent target and even financial
beneficiaries AGL cast doubt on its future effectiveness saying the
policy needs to be longer-term focus.
The Abbott Government and Mr Hunt are trying
their hardest, as they did on these pages last month, to deceive
Australians about Labor’s policy. Labor has made it clear a fixed price
on carbon will not be part of our plan.
Our plan is about fairness and meaningful action on
climate change. Not only will it work, but it will not line the pockets
of Australia’s electricity companies.
Labor will place a legal cap on carbon pollution, that reduces over time.
It will be underpinned by a market mechanism
that lets business work out the cheapest and most effective way to
operate within that cap.
This is the model being adopted by our closest trading partners.
China has seven emissions trading schemes in
place, with plans to move to a national scheme. Our third largest export
partner, South Korea, moved to a national emissions trading scheme this
year, among many others.
Labor will also have an ambitious renewable
energy plan. Bill Shorten has said if we’re elected in 2016, we’ll top
up the 2020 Renewable Energy Target.
I have begun consultation with industry, the
finance sector and other stakeholders about Labor’s post-2020 renewable
energy policy, with a view to see an increased role for more renewables
in Australia’s energy market.
If Mr Abbott wants to fight the next election over effective
action on climate change, fairness and value for taxpayers and
transitioning Australia to a clean energy economy, I say bring it on.
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