Extract from The Guardian
Labor’s environment spokesman says Paris
agreement objectives are clear and Malcolm Turnbull needs to match
Australia’s policies to these objectives
French President
François Hollande (centre) applauds delegates with French ecology
minister Ségolène Royal and foreign affairs minister Laurent Fabius
at the world climate change conference in Paris. Photograph: Philippe
Wojazer/EPA
Australian Associated Press
Sunday 13 December 2015 18.22 AEDT
Labor has called on the prime minister to dump the
Coalition’s direct action policy in response to the historic
United Nations climate agreement in Paris.
The opposition leader, Bill Shorten, welcomed the
global
commitment to holding increases in average temperatures to well below
2C and the further commitment to pursue efforts to limit
increases to 1.5C.
“The objectives of the agreement are crystal
clear and Australia now needs to match policies to these objectives,”
Shorten and Labor’s environment spokesman, Mark Butler, said in a
joint statement on Sunday.
But they said the government’s
direct action policy that paid polluters was completely
inadequate and put Australia on a trajectory to fail.
“Now is the time for Malcolm
Turnbull to step up and dump his party’s continuing support for
Tony Abbott’s direct action fraud.”“He must show leadership and
honesty on climate change and stare down the National party and the
far right of his Liberal
party.”
The Paris climate accord has been received with
widespread relief in Australia.
But questions have been raised about whether
Australia can reach what the foreign minister, Julie
Bishop, readily admits is an ambitious target.
Bishop described the deal, which includes
five-yearly reviews of countries’ progress on slashing emissions,
as an
extraordinary achievement.
But she warned the hard work begins now and while
boosting efforts will be difficult, the government won’t be
jeopardising the economy.
“We have to get that balance right between
environmental and economic outcomes,” she told reporters in Paris.
The acting Greens leader, Larissa Waters, welcomed
the outcome but said Australia remained wedded to the coal industry
as international counterparts looked to clean energy alternatives.
“We know so much is at stake and here in
Australia we’ve got so much to lose by continuing to have our head
in the sand on global warming,” Waters told reporters in Brisbane.
Business Council of Australia chief executive
Jennifer Westacott was more upbeat, saying Australia has made a solid
contribution to what is significant progress.
“With the ongoing reviews of targets it will be
important for Australia to set in place the policies to achieve its
reduction at low cost while managing competitiveness,” she said.
Environmentalist Tim Flannery also described it as
a watershed moment.
“We have witnessed something incredible today.
Finally, we can feel hopeful that we are on a path to tackling
climate change,” Flannery, who is a member of the Climate Council,
said on Sunday. “The era of renewable energy is upon us.”
The chief executive of WWF Australia, Dermot
O’Gorman, agreed: “Paris marks the end of the fossil fuel age.”
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