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Sunday, 13 December 2015
What does the Paris climate agreement mean for Australia?
Climate policy is no longer something that can be papered over, or
worked around, or ignored, or used as a political attack weapon
Coal operations at the Port of Newcastle: We will have to retire the old
brown coal-fired generators and reduce industrial carbon pollution.
Photograph: William West/AFP/Getty Images
Surely Australia can use this Paris climate agreement to finally end the barren, wasted years of climate policy war.
There’s already an uneasy ceasefire, a let-up in the mind-numbing
slogans. Labor is promising some kind of emissions trading scheme and a
relatively ambitious renewable energy target – but no details yet lest
it once again feels the barrage of a full bore axe-the-tax scare
campaign. Under the sceptical gaze of his party’s hard right, Malcolm
Turnbull is also unwilling to even hint at the policy changes he and his
minister Greg Hunt appear to be planning when they revise Australia’s
policy after the election.
But now the world has entered a binding agreement – imperfect and incomplete in parts – but absolutely clear on one thing, all countries have agreed to reduce their greenhouse emissions and keep reducing them.
That has some very big implications for Australia.
We will be under pressure to revise our emissions reduction target
out to 2030 – the one we brought to Paris – by 2020. Given that we are
among the world’s highest per capita emitters and our target has been
rated inadequate by the Climate Tracker think tank and other analysts we
are going to be under strong pressure to increase its ambition.
To meet even the current target, and certainly a higher one, we will
have to get real about emission reductions, including from electricity
generation. We will have to find a way to retire the old brown
coal-fired generators and start reducing industrial carbon pollution. Australian business and environment groups
are begging political parties to come up with some kind of stable,
sensible plan. The World Bank, the International Monetary Fund and
multiple heads of state in Paris think the best policy is a carbon
price, using Paris to launch the carbon pricing leadership coalition.
Greg Hunt spent his time in Paris continuing to pretend that his
emissions reduction fund (ERF) is a carbon price and also an idea being
adopted around the word, but the experts, when asked
said reverse auctions like the ERF were useful additions to a carbon
price but not a good primary policy to drive down greenhouse emissions.
The bottom line is that to meet our 2030 target the ERF is not going to
cut it.
Fossil fuel use will continue to decline. It won’t stop – even with
their accelerating roll-out of renewables, India and China are still
building coal-fired power stations. But as renewables get cheaper and
countries actively shift away from fossil fuels, any government backing
for the infrastructure needed by big new coal mines appears increasingly
misguided.
The smart investment will be in clean technologies and Turnbull
wants to be active and nimble and innovative and get a slice of it, he
needs a credible, clear, transparent domestic climate policy, and
quickly. That’s exactly what Jie Zhang, from Chinese firm Hareon Solar, told me he is looking for when deciding whether to make a billion dollar investment in Australia next year.
We won’t get away with using accounting rules to reach our
emission-reduction pledges for much longer. Five big developed countries
announced in Paris they had voluntarily cancelled emission reduction “credits” achieved by overshooting their first Kyoto Protocol greenhouse targets – the same kind of credits Australia is banking to boast it has already “met and beaten” its international pledges.
The Paris agreement “encourages parties to promote the voluntary
cancellation ... of units issued under the Kyoto Protocol, including
certified emissions reductions that are valid for the second commitment
period”. Australia says it is going to ignore that encouragement, but
the fact that this statement is in the deal indicates we are unlikely to
get to pull the same swifty in the future.
We are also going to be under pressure to stump up more money to
help vulnerable countries cope with the impacts of climate change. The
government fudged this in Paris, saying it would provide at least $200m a
year – which appears to be a figure arrived at by adding up what we are
already providing. Canada, by contrast, promised $2.5bn.
The Paris agreement should mean Australia stops pretending climate
policy is something that can be papered over, or worked around, or
ignored, or used as a political attack weapon. It should mean we finally
understand that a clear, long-term policy for moving away from fossil
fuels is not a threat, but an opportunity.
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