Shadow climate change minister Mark Butler says Labor open to dealing with Neg legislation before states sign off


The shadow climate change minister Mark Butler says Labor is open to dealing with the government’s national energy guarantee legislation before the states have signed off on it.
But with the government scrambling to land a power price fix to quell an internal rebellion on the Neg and keep a lid on any leadership tensions, Butler has given an explicit warning the opposition will torpedo any new taxpayer support for coal-fired power.
Senior government figures have spent the week attempting to peel back the number of government MPs prepared to cross the floor on the Neg by expediting complementary policies, including recent recommendations by the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission, one of which includes governments under-writing new power generation investments.
But Butler has warned Labor will not back the fix if it includes supporting new coal projects.
“The idea that taxpayers would take on a risk that investors are not willing to take on I think would be a gross abuse of the political office of prime minister,” he told Guardian Australia’s politics podcast.
The shadow minister said it still was not clear what the government would ultimately bring forward to placate the dissenting backbenchers, but “if it’s about taking enormous risks with taxpayer funds, then we are going to oppose it”.
He said if the government managed to secure support elsewhere in the parliament and pressed ahead with underwriting a new coal power project in the coming months, Labor would not feel obliged to honour that commitment if it wins the next election.

"We are going to move an amendment which is 45%."

Asked whether he was prepared to weather a politically-charged debate about sovereign risk, Butler said: “We have a strong view about maintaining investor confidence in an economy like Australia that depends so much on investment, including overseas investment – but equally we have been crystal clear on this.”
Butler declared new coal power was “not good for our energy system or for our economy”. He said no one could feign surprise about this position, because Labor had been “clear about our views on that”.
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