Morrison defends Australia's action on climate change in UN speech (ABC News)
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The Prime Minister has been slammed by scientists and a few business people for skipping a special climate conference in New York on Monday.
Some said the Government had so far failed to put forward a "credible climate or energy policy".
But during a wide-ranging address to the United Nations General Assembly, Mr Morrison hit back, claiming critics "willingly overlook or ignore" the work Australia has done to curb emissions.
"The facts simply don't fit the narrative they wish to project about our contribution," he added.
"Australia is doing our bit on climate change and we reject any suggestion to the contrary."
Why the Coalition is misleading on the Kyoto 2020 target |
He also declared the nation had "overachieved" on its 2020 Kyoto protocol targets and would meet its Paris emissions reduction goals too.
"We are committed to reducing greenhouse gas emissions by 26 to 28 per cent below 2005 levels by 2030," Mr Morrison said.
"This is a credible, fair, responsible and achievable contribution to global climate change action."
Earlier in the day he seemed to suggest the media was responsible for spreading "misinformation" about his Government's climate policies.
Paris 2030: Will we make it? |
"Criticisms that have been made about Australia are completely false and they're completely misleading and people have had a prejudiced view."
"Where do they get their information from? Maybe they read it.
"Australia's got nothing to apologise for."
Children's climate anxiety being 'facelessly exploited'
During his address, the Prime Minister revealed he received many letters from children concerned about their future.
He said he welcomed "their passion, especially when it comes to the environment".
Mr Morrison also seemed to make a direct reference to Swedish teenage climate change activist Greta Thunberg's highly-publicised address to world leaders on Monday and recent global youth climate strikes.
PM's Climate Summit snub sends strong message to neighbours |
"We must respect and harness the passion and aspiration of our younger generations, rather than allow others to compound or, worse, facelessly exploit their anxiety for their own agendas."
The Prime Minister also seemed to reject a warning from UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres, who said on Tuesday he feared the world could soon experience a "great fracture" and become divided between the United States and China.
Mr Morrison said that the planet was "complex and contested" but added that Australia would continue to work with its "great and powerful friends".
"Many fatalistically see a polarised world where countries feel pushed to make binary choices," he said.
"Australia will continue to resist this path."
Greta Thunberg delivers scathing speech at UN climate summit (ABC News)
Links
- Why the Coalition is misleading on meeting Australia's Kyoto 2020 carbon emissions target
- Are Australia’s efforts to curb global warming enough to meet our Paris target?
- UN Climate Summit snub by Scott Morrison sends strong message to Australia's neighbours
- Australian tech company Atlassian commits to net zero emissions by 2050
- David Attenborough slams Australian PM on climate record
- Scott Morrison should have gone to hear Greta Thunberg
- PM's claim ocean plastics are 'more immediate threat' disputed by scientists
- Hotter oceans, wilder weather, less ice: the IPCC upgrades projections to catastrophic
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