Extract from The Guardian
Opposition leader says ‘I don’t understand
what happened to the Malcolm Turnbull of 2009’ and says country
missing out on renewables opportunities'
Malcolm Turnbull has rejected the unilateral
banning of coal exports, saying prospective buyers would simply look
overseas for their energy requirements. Photograph: Dave Hunt/AAP
Tuesday 27 October 2015 16.03 AEDT
The right wing of the Coalition is forcing
Australians to “pledge loyalty” to coal and in the process
missing out on investment opportunities in renewable energy, the
opposition leader, Bill
Shorten, said.
Shorten addressed reporters on Tuesday, explaining
the constraints that the prime minister, Malcolm
Turnbull, was facing from the right of his own party.
“I think the right of Australian
politics is taking the debate about our energy future down fairly
sort of draconian paths where we’re demanding we’ve got to pledge
loyalty to one form of energy hand over heart,” he said.
“I don’t understand what happened to the
Malcolm Turnbull of 2009 who was willing to stake all on the
principle of lowering carbon emissions, on having policies which were
sensible on climate change.”
In
an open letter, 61 prominent Australians called on world leaders
to discuss halting of new coalmine projects and blocking the
expansion of existing ones when they meet for a United Nations
climate conference in Paris later this year.
Turnbull on Tuesday morning rejected the
unilateral banning of coal exports, saying that prospective buyers
would simply look further afield for their energy requirements.
Shorten warned that the ideological commitment to
coal was impacting on the economy.
“I’m worried, as we have these left-right
arguments about are you for coal or against coal, that we’re
missing the investment opportunity,” he said.
But he would not commit to Labor abandoning
non-renewables altogether.
“I don’t think it’s up to government to pick
the winner and say that coal is bad,” Shorten said. “Labor
doesn’t think that.”
Speaking in Canberra, Turnbull said a moratorium
on Australian coal exports “would make not the blindest bit of
difference to global emissions” because importers would buy it from
elsewhere.
Turnbull said coal remained a significant part of
the global energy mix and would be “an absolutely critical
ingredient” in alleviating hunger and promoting prosperity around
the world. This appeared to be an extension of the
“moral case” for coal exports advocated by the energy
minister, Josh Frydenberg, and by the coal industry in support of
increasing supply to developing markets such as India.
But the prime minister undercut that argument by
conceding many people in developing countries were not on an
electricity grid, and renewable energy sources such as solar could
become more cost-effective in those circumstances.
“I don’t agree with the idea of a moratorium
on exporting coal. With great respect to the people who advocated it,
it would make not the blindest bit of difference to global
emissions,” Turnbull said.
“If Australia stopped exporting coal, the
countries to which we export it would buy it from somewhere else. So
there is absolutely quite a lot of coal around ... so if Australia
were to stop all of its coal exports it would not reduce global
emissions one iota. In fact, arguably it would increase them because
our coal, by and large, is cleaner than the coal in many other
countries.
“With great respect to the motivations and the
big hearts and the idealism of the people that advocate that, that is
actually not a sensible policy from an economic point of view, a jobs
point of view or frankly from a global warming or global emissions
point of view.”
The Australian Conservation Foundation accused
Turnbull of “resorting to the drug dealer’s defence” by arguing
that someone else would supply the coal.
“Australia has a moral responsibility to help
our developing neighbours leapfrog over dirty coal, straight to clean
renewable energy,” said the foundation’s chief executive, Kelly
O’Shanassy.
The Australia Institute, which helped organise
Tuesday’s open letter, suggested Turnbull had ignored the substance
of the proposal by focusing on Australian exports. The open letter
called for world leaders to negotiate a moratorium on new coalmines
and coalmine expansions, and referred to a similar call by the
president of Kiribati, Anote Tong.
“Malcolm Turnbull should take the time to read
the letter from President Tong – it is not a call for an export
ban, but a considered call for a global moratorium on new coalmines,”
said Ben Oquist, the executive director of the Australia Institute.
“This is an entirely sensible move both
environmentally and economically. Now is the time to pick up the
phone to President Tong to discuss how Australia can be a leader in
the climate debate.”
Greens deputy leader Larissa Waters said Turnbull
was “using rhetoric to juggle the wishes of the climate dinosaurs
in his party against the overwhelming community support for climate
action”.
“Australians deserve more than a prime minister
who sidesteps questions about our future and that of our children and
our Pacific neighbours,” she said. “Coal must not be treated as
the elephant in the room at the climate talks.”
Turnbull was addressing the media as he confirmed
the
appointment of Dr Alan Finkel, the outgoing chancellor of Monash
University, as Australia’s next chief scientist. Finkel, an
engineer, has previously called for a debate about nuclear
electricity generation in Australia as part of efforts to curb carbon
dioxide emissions.
The media conference was dominated by questions
about Australia’s response to climate change as world leaders
prepare to meet in Paris to discuss post-2020 emission reduction
targets.
Finkel said his vision was “for a country,
society, a world where we don’t use any coal, oil or natural gas
because we have zero-emissions electricity in huge abundance and we
use that for transport, for heating and for all the things we
ordinary use electricity”.
“But you can’t get there overnight, so what we
need to do is optimise the technology so that with we can
cost-effectively introduce alternatives,” Finkel said.
“The best way to get rid of coal is to introduce
alternatives that deliver value at a reasonable price rather than
just arbitrarily turning it off.”
Turnbull said coal was likely to remain a very
large part of the global energy mix “for a very long time” and he
cited “energy poverty” as a major limit on achieving the
development goals of alleviating hunger and promoting prosperity
around the world.
“Coal is going to play a big part in that,” he
said. “Having said that, the pace of technological development in
the renewable space has been extraordinary.”
Turnbull singled out the improvement in battery
storage for solar power as “a big game-changer” and described the
energy field as “very disruptive, very disrupted”.
“Solar panels and batteries in an Australian
household context at the moment are probably not in most cases
competitive with the price of grid-delivered power,” he said.
“However, if you are in a remote community, or
if you are in a community in a developing country where there is no
electricity grid, and the alternative is generating power by burning
diesel, then solar panels and some batteries, if the efficiency of
the panels is improved and the price and efficiency of the batteries
has come down could actually be and very often is much more
cost-effective.
“So it’s horses for courses. It is important
to take the ideology out of this and just approach it in a very
clear-eyed, cool-headed rational way.”
Supporters of Adani’s $16bn Carmichael coalmine
and rail proposal for central Queensland, which was re-approved
by the federal government this month, have argued it would help
lift millions of Indians out of energy poverty. But analysts
have disputed the claimed benefits on the basis that many remote
villages are beyond the reach of the electricity grid.
Finkel, whose appointment begins in January upon
the expiry of Professor Ian Chubb’s five-year term, would not give
an opinion about the adequacy of the government’s 2030 target of
reducing Australia’s greenhouse gas emissions to 26%-28% below 2005
levels. He said he would “need time to engage on that”.
But Finkel vowed to provide the government with
evidence-based advice and was “absolutely confident” that he
would have a receptive audience.
In broader remarks, Turnbull and the science
minister, Christopher Pyne, praised Finkel for his personal
experience as an entrepreneur translating research into commercial
products, saying he was well-suited to improve collaboration between
universities, research centres and business.
Turnbull, who lost the Liberal leadership in 2009
after an internal backlash against his support for an emissions
trading scheme, has promised his colleagues that he will stick with
the Coalition’s “Direct Action” climate policies, although he
has left the door open to considering changes in 2017 when a review
of the safeguards mechanism is due. Turnbull is planning to
attend the climate talks in Paris in December.
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