Tuesday 22 November 2022

Anthony Albanese accuses Peter Dutton of ‘dog-whistling’ after attack on Cop27 climate damage fund.

Extract from The Guardian 

PM says opposition leader’s claim that climate aid is ‘giving away’ Australians’ money boosts re-election chances of independents and Greens over Liberals.

Australian prime minister Anthony Albanese accuses opposition leader Peter Dutton of ‘dog-whistling’ over a question about the Cop27 climate damage fund
In response to Peter Dutton’s question about the climate loss and damage fund, Anthony Albanese said the ‘price of entry’ into productive global relationships was a serious climate policy.
Political editor
Mon 21 Nov 2022 19.48 AEDTFirst published on Mon 21 Nov 2022 19.36 AEDT
Anthony Albanese has accused Peter Dutton of “dog-whistling” and boosting the re-election chances of teal independents and Greens over Liberals after the opposition leader attacked Labor for supporting a fund to help the developing world recover from climate catastrophes.

Dutton opened the first question time after the Cop27 summit querying whether “charity” should “begin at home”, after the climate conference agreed to establish a response fund to help vulnerable countries rebuild social and physical infrastructure after extreme weather events exacerbated by greenhouse gas emissions.

The opposition leader asked why, “at a time when Labor’s policies are driving up cost-of-living pressures for families, the government has just signed up to funding a $2tn loss and damage climate fund which will send money overseas and beyond our region?”

Dutton continued: “Prime minister, doesn’t charity begin at home? And when will you start helping Australian families instead of giving away their money?”

Albanese then rounded on Dutton, declaring the framing of the question offensive and reminding the Liberal leader he had once stood under a microphone “making jokes about Pacific Islands drowning”.

Appearing on the ABC shortly after question time, the shadow foreign minister, Simon Birmingham, struck a different note. Birmingham said the loss and damage agreement struck in Egypt was “scant on details” so the nature of commitments under the prospective fund were not yet clear.

Rather than characterising development assistance for climate disasters as “charity” Birmingham acknowledged the Coalition had provided climate change assistance “neighbours and friends” while in government.

Birmingham said Australia would need to make sure that the Pacific remained a priority if there was a transition to an international fund by “ensuring that there is no dilution of support to our Pacific Island countries who we need to be at the forefront of assisting”.

It was put to Birmingham that many Pacific nations were calling for the global fund.

The shadow minister it was important “that we do work as closely and in lockstep with them as possible” but he said it was also important for Australia to maintain discretion about where the funding went. Australia would need “confidence that Pacific Island nations are getting the support that they need”.

The issue of loss and damage was front-and-centre during the UN climate conference in Egypt.

Developing countries for decades have called on the developed world to provide more assistance to help them recover after climate-related disasters. But the developed world, concerned about assuming liability, has resisted those calls, arguing existing green funding could be used for that purpose.

But the European Union swung behind the concept in the dying days of Cop27, supporting a fund in principle on the condition that big economies and big emitters still classed as developing countries under UN climate rules would need to make contributions. This means countries like China would be part of the scheme.

No comments:

Post a Comment