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Thursday, 31 August 2017
States powering ahead on climate targets despite federal inaction, report shows
After being criticised by Canberra, South Australia is leading the
race, with ACT and Tasmania close behind, says Climate Council
Mount Millar windfarm, South Australia. The state is performing better
than any other state or territory in helping Australia to meet
greenhouse gas targets.
Photograph: Tim Phillips Photos/Getty Images
Australian states and territories are powering ahead, developing
policies that will meet the federal government’s internationally agreed
greenhouse gas emission targets, with South Australia, the ACT and Tasmania leading the race. Despite being chastised by the federal government for unilateral action, South Australia is leading the race, with the ACT and Tasmania not far behind, according to a report by the Climate Council.
Compared on a series of measures including penetration of renewable
energy, the percentage of households with solar, as well as emissions
and renewable energy targets, the Northern Territory, Western Australia
and New South Wales are at the back of the pack, with Victoria and
Queensland in the middle.
Australia’s greenhouse gas emissions have been rising ever since the
Coalition government repealed the carbon tax in 2014. The federal
government’s own projections show their policies will cause emissions to
continue to rise for decades to come.
But in the midst of the ongoing federal policy vacuum, every state
and territory besides Western Australia has “gone it alone” and
developed strong renewable energy and emissions reduction policies.
South Australia leads the country with 47% of its electricity sourced from renewable sources, followed by the ACT at 22%. Tasmania sourced 92% of its electricity from renewable sources, but that was dominated by large-scale hydro electricity.
The Northern Territory sourced just 2% of its electricity from
renewable sources, sitting behind Western Australia and Queensland at
7%. Victoria sourced 12% from renewables while NSW sat at 17%.
Queensland led the country when it comes to solar households, with
32% of homes having solar panels. That just pipped South Australia,
which had 31%.
While both Western Australia and the Northern Territory scored poorly
on most measures, there appeared to be grassroots momentum there for
solar rooftops, with the biggest increases in solar penetration over the
past year happening in those states. Western Australia jumped almost
three percentage points to more than 25% penetration, and the Northern
Territory jumped 2.7 percentage points to 11.4% – a figure that was
still the lowest in the country.
The ACT and Tasmania had the strongest renewable energy targets, with
the former aiming to implement a 100% target by 2020 and the latter by
2022. The ACT’s aggressive and bipartisan renewable energy policies
delivered the lowest energy costs in the country for consumers.
Every state except Western Australia and the Northern Territory had
targets to reduce net greenhouse gas emissions to zero by 2050.
Those policies, combined with a surge in grassroots activity and
market-driven closure of coal power plants, look set to easily cut
Australia’s emissions by more 28% below 2005 levels, as Australia
committed to following the Paris Agreement in 2015. That was the
conclusion of a report by Frontier Economics
earlier in the year, which concluded: “The commonwealth government will
receive credit for state renewable policies that contribute to meeting
the 2030 emissions target, while admonishing them for any energy
security issues that may result.
“Every state and territory, with the exception of Western Australia,
is taking energy and climate policy into their own hands, with strong
renewable energy targets or net zero emissions targets in place,” said
Climate Council councillor and energy expert Andrew Stock.
“States and territories previously lagging (NT, NSW and WA), are now
stepping up the pace, joining the enormous progress we’re seeing across
the nation,” he said.
Climate Council member and former president of BP Australasia, Greg
Bourne, said Australians are embracing solar energy in droves, with more
than 5.6GW generated on the rooftops of 1.7 million homes.
“Australia is one of the sunniest countries in the world, so it’s no
surprise we’ve already rolled out enough solar to power the lights at
the MCG every day for 20,000 years,” he said.
States leading the way without federal coordination was described as a
“a messy dog’s breakfast” by the Grattan Institute’s Tony Wood, who
went on to say the unilateral state action was “understandable with
federal climate change inaction”.
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