Contemporary politics,local and international current affairs, science, music and extracts from the Queensland Newspaper "THE WORKER" documenting the proud history of the Labour Movement.
MAHATMA GANDHI ~ Truth never damages a cause that is just.
Friday, 7 July 2017
Government held back greenhouse gas emission data for more than a month
Australia’s official greenhouse gas data, showing a continued
increase in emissions, was quietly published on a government website on
Friday, after internal government correspondence showed it had been held
back from release for more than a month.
The figures broadly confirm independent analysis done exclusively for Guardian Australia
by consultants at NDEVR Environmental, published last month. Those
projections proved about 98% accurate, with emissions rising by even
more than was projected.
The government also updated all its historical data, showing
emissions going back to at least 2001 were higher than previously
thought, with most of these revisions due to gas leaks from the mining
sector – fugitive emissions.
The data still remains one quarter behind, and the NDEVR-Guardian
analysis published in June projected an unseasonal rise in emissions not
seen in more than a decade for that quarter – the first three months of
this year.
The government release covers emissions up to December 2016 and
confirms that they have continued to rise. The new figures for 2016 show
emissions rose 1% over the new estimation of 2015 emissions – but that
was a rise of 1.7% compared with the government’s previous estimation of
2015 figures.
The rise is in line with government projections, which show that on
current policies, emissions will continue to rise to 2030 and beyond.
But they are in stark contrast to to Australia’s international
commitments made as part of the Paris agreement, which now state that
emissions will fall to at least 26% below 2005 levels by 2030. Australia
has also committed to ratchet up that ambition over time, in line with
the goal of keeping global warming to “well below 2C”.
Most of the increase in emissions occurred in the “stationary energy”
sector – which includes fuels used for heating and energy besides
electricity generation – as well as in fugitive emissions. .
The figures were released on the same day the Australian Conservation Foundation published documents
it obtained under freedom of information laws showing that the
government had been sitting on the release for more than a month.
After the information was released, the federal minister for energy
and the environment, Josh Frydenberg, tweeted a link to the report,
pointing out that emissions from the electricity sector had dropped in
the last quarter covered by the report.
Emissions from the electricity sector almost always fall in the
December quarter, but the NDEVR-Guardian projections suggest they rose
dramatically in the quarter to March 2017, which is very unusual. Those
figures are yet to be released by the government.
The climate scientist Will Steffen, a member of the Climate Council, said Australia’s rising emissions were an embarrassment.
“This is clear evidence that Australia is failing to tackle climate
change compared to superpowers like the United States, whose emissions
fell last year, and China, which has peaked its emissions more than a
decade earlier than it promised in Paris,” he said.
“In contrast, Australia’s lack of an effective climate and energy
policy has now led to even higher emission levels while the big global
emitters begin to reduce carbon pollution.”
No comments:
Post a Comment