| Key
Points |
- New ACT climate paper shifts from
fixed targets to a flexible framework backed by rolling
action plans.1
- Strategy groups act under eight
themes, keeping a 2045 net zero goal but soft‑pedalling 2035
milestones.2
- Government concedes it is
unlikely to fully meet its 2025 emissions target, exposing a
credibility gap.3
- Community and environment groups
have branded the discussion paper a vague “placeholder”.4
- The ACT’s claim to climate
leadership is under pressure amid weak national progress and
ongoing fossil fuel approvals.5
- Public consultation runs to 18
March 2026, framed by advocates as a last chance to demand a
plan with teeth.6
|
On a not‑too‑distant summer afternoon in 2035, the bitumen in a quiet
Gungahlin cul‑de‑sac is soft enough to take a footprint, the air still
and 40‑plus degrees even after 6pm, and the only movement is the
shimmer above the roofs of tightly packed townhouses.7
Inside, an evaporative cooler labours uselessly in air that is both
scorching and dry, while a young family huddles in the only
semi‑bearable room, scrolling their phones to find the nearest public
“heat refuge” promised in the ACT’s new climate strategy.7
Outside, the patchy street trees offer almost no shade, and the
concrete paths radiate stored heat accumulated over days of a heatwave
that climate models say will become far more frequent in Canberra by
mid‑century.7
Against this backdrop of lethal heating, the ACT Climate Change
Strategy 2026–35 arrives wrapped in the cool language of “overarching
frameworks”, “thematic pillars” and “sequenced action plans”.1
It promises a fair and inclusive shift to a net‑zero,
climate‑resilient city by 2045, but leaves key decisions about how
steeply emissions must fall in the 2030s to future documents and
future ministers.1
Community groups and climate advocates say that gap between embodied
heat in suburbs like Gungahlin and the paper’s abstract language could
be measured in extra ambulance call‑outs, higher power bills, and
lives lost in poorly insulated rentals.4
Now, with consultation open until 18 March 2026, Canberrans are being
asked whether a framework without firm 2035 targets is enough as the
climate crisis accelerates around them.6
The promise of a new framework
The ACT Climate Change Strategy 2026–35 is pitched as an evolution
rather than a rewrite, shifting from a single, detailed plan to an
overarching framework supported by a series of shorter‑term action
plans that can be updated as technology, economics and federal policy
change.1
The government argues this model will allow it to respond more nimbly
to new risks and opportunities, rather than locking in a fixed list of
measures in 2026 that may be out of date by the early 2030s.1
In practice, that means the strategy sets the direction and
principles, while detailed commitments – from building standards to
public transport timetables and retrofit programs – are pushed into
rolling action plans with shorter time horizons.1
Officials frame this as a way to avoid the “set and forget” problem
that plagued some earlier climate documents, in which ambitious
targets were not always matched by delivery mechanisms or regular
public reporting.10
But critics warn that flexibility cuts both ways: a framework can be
a vehicle for rapid escalation, or a convenient shell into which
future governments pour watered‑down commitments if political winds
change.4
Eight themes, one net‑zero horizon
The discussion paper organises the next decade of climate action into
eight themes that run from energy and transport through to resilience,
housing, nature and the economy, each intended to knit mitigation and
adaptation together.1
The themes include energy, transport, buildings and urban form, the
natural environment, waste and the circular economy, industry and
innovation, community resilience and wellbeing, and government
leadership.1
Across these pillars the strategy reaffirms the territory’s
long‑standing goal of reaching net zero emissions by 2045, building on
interim targets of a 50–60% cut by 2025, 65–75% by 2030 and 90–95% by
2040 against 1990 levels.8
Having already shifted its electricity supply to 100% renewable
contracts, the ACT locates the bulk of remaining emissions cuts in
phasing out fossil gas, electrifying transport, improving building
performance and reshaping urban development to reduce car dependence.10
Electrification is the dominant through‑line: the paper foreshadows a
gas‑free future for new suburbs, continued expansion of zero‑emissions
public transport, and support for households to replace gas appliances
and petrol cars with electric alternatives powered by renewables.10
On the adaptation side, the themes bundle commitments around
resilient infrastructure, urban cooling, emergency management and
nature‑based solutions such as urban forests and restored waterways
that can blunt the worst impacts of extreme heat and storms.1
Electrification and resilient infrastructure
The strategy doubles down on the ACT’s reputation as an early mover
on electrification, with a clear signal that gas has no long‑term
future in the territory’s homes, businesses or public assets.10
Earlier commitments – including phasing out gas by 2045, delivering
all new government buildings and public schools as all‑electric, and
transitioning the government’s passenger fleet and bus network to zero
emissions – are presented as foundations for the next phase rather
than completed work.10
Electrification is framed not just as a climate measure but as a
cost‑of‑living and health intervention, with more efficient homes,
cleaner air and reduced exposure to volatile fossil fuel prices cited
as co‑benefits.1
Resilient infrastructure emerges as the other major pillar, with the
paper canvassing upgrades to energy and transport networks, drainage
systems and public assets so they can withstand longer heatwaves, more
intense storms and increased bushfire risk.1
This includes proposals for more shaded streets, climate‑ready
schools and community facilities that can double as refuges during
extreme heat and smoke events, acknowledging that even rapid emissions
cuts will not prevent dangerous warming already locked in by past
pollution.9
The target the ACT is likely to miss
Beneath the aspirational language, the paper contains a blunt
admission: the ACT is unlikely to fully achieve its 2025 emissions
reduction target of 50–60% below 1990 levels, despite its vaunted
status as “the nation’s climate action capital”.8
The government points to population growth, slower‑than‑expected
shifts in transport and building emissions, and national policy
constraints as reasons the territory is struggling to bend the curve
fast enough in the early 2020s.1
That frankness is unusual in Australian climate politics, where
missed milestones are more often buried than acknowledged, but it also
raises uncomfortable questions about whether the ACT can credibly
promise steeper cuts again in the 2030s.11
Under the existing trajectory, the ACT must not only regain lost
ground from the 2025 shortfall but accelerate towards its 2030 and
2040 goals, cutting deeply into transport and building emissions that
tend to be slow and capital‑intensive to shift.8
Critics say this is precisely why the new strategy should contain
binding, sector‑specific targets for 2035 and beyond, rather than
leaving the steepness of the emissions descent curve to future action
plans and future parliaments.4
Frameworks, hard numbers and the 2035 gap
The timing of the ACT strategy coincides with the federal government
adopting a national 2035 target of cutting emissions 62–70% below 2005
levels, a benchmark that highlights how much of Australia’s
decarbonisation effort is now expected in the decade after 2030.12
National projections released late last year suggested Australia was
on track for only about a 48% cut by 2035 on current settings, well
short of that goal, underscoring how quickly policies will need to
tighten if the country is to stay inside a 1.5C‑consistent carbon
budget.12
Against that backdrop, the ACT’s decision to stop short of spelling
out explicit 2035 targets in its core strategy looks to some like a
retreat from the transparent, time‑bound goals that once set the
territory apart from larger jurisdictions.8
Climate advocates argue that a framework without clear waypoints
risks allowing incrementalism to creep back in, especially as the
“easy wins” of renewable electricity have already been banked and the
remaining cuts require reshaping transport, housing and land‑use
patterns.11
Others, including some policy experts, say a framework could still
drive deep cuts if it is paired with legally binding carbon budgets,
transparent sectoral plans and independent monitoring that forces
future governments to explain any backsliding in public.10
For now, the draft paper leans more on the language of “pathways” and
“options” than on the hard numbers and enforcement mechanisms that
would give those pathways real teeth.1
Voices from the ground
Outside the bureaucracy, patience is wearing thin among parts of
Canberra’s climate movement, which has long celebrated the ACT’s
leadership but now fears the territory is coasting on past
achievements just as the crisis intensifies.4
The Conservation Council ACT Region has described the 2026–35
discussion paper as a “vague”, “hastily put‑together placeholder” that
sketches broad principles but ducks crucial decisions about timelines
and accountability for cutting emissions this decade and next.4
Housing advocates, renters’ groups and health organisations are also
pressing for much stronger commitments on minimum energy performance
standards, mandatory upgrades for the worst‑performing rentals and
more ambitious urban greening to cut lethal heat in low‑income
suburbs.9
They argue that without concrete timelines and funding for measures
like deep retrofits, street trees and accessible cooling refuges, the
burden of rising temperatures will continue to fall hardest on people
in older homes, social housing and outer‑suburban estates with little
shade.9
For these groups, the debate is less about the elegance of the
framework and more about whether their members will be safer,
healthier and less exposed by the time the next mega‑heatwave or
smoke‑choked summer rolls through the capital.7
The government’s collective action case
The ACT government, for its part, insists the strategy is grounded in
collective action and wellbeing, highlighting co‑benefits such as
lower bills, cleaner air, active transport, improved biodiversity and
more liveable neighbourhoods as central to the plan.1
Ministers argue that framing climate policy through health, equity
and quality of life – rather than only tonnes of carbon – will make it
easier to build durable public support for the disruptive changes
required in housing, transport and energy systems.1
The paper talks about partnering with communities, businesses and
First Nations organisations to co‑design local solutions, from
neighbourhood‑scale energy projects to nature‑based adaptation and
culturally appropriate emergency responses.1
Yet in the absence of binding interim targets or guaranteed minimum
investment levels, those aspirations risk reading as hopeful rather
than assured, leaving community groups to fight the same battles
budget by budget and project by project.4
The tension between the government’s emphasis on shared wellbeing and
advocates’ demand for harder edges – targets, timelines, enforcement
and funding – runs through almost every section of the draft strategy.4
Climate leadership at a crossroads
For more than a decade, the ACT has revelled in its image as
Australia’s climate pioneer, from legislating ambitious targets to
contracting 100% renewable electricity and pledging to phase out gas
without buying offsets to meet its goals.10
That leadership has often stood in stark contrast to national policy,
where the Safeguard Mechanism, heavy reliance on offsets and a
slow‑moving coal and gas sector have left Australia off‑track for both
its 2030 and 2035 targets.12
At the same time, the federal government has promoted “Nature
Positive” laws and global biodiversity summits while continuing to
approve new fossil fuel projects and maintain a pipeline of coal and
gas developments that independent analysts say would blow the global
1.5C budget.13
Reports released in the wake of recent disasters such as Cyclone
Alfred have described Australia as a “fossil fuel behemoth”, noting
that its coal, oil and gas exports are on track to cause several times
more climate damage than its domestic emissions.13
In that context, the ACT’s new strategy will be read not just as a
local policy document but as a test of whether a self‑declared climate
leader can maintain its edge with frameworks and principles rather
than firm timelines and enforceable carbon budgets.8
If the territory loosens its grip on clear targets while the rest of
the country continues to expand fossil fuel production under a Nature
Positive banner, the gap between climate rhetoric and lived reality in
suburbs like Gungahlin will only widen.12
Adaptation, accountability and a deadline
Beyond emissions accounting, the 2026–35 strategy will shape how
Canberra adapts to a climate already changing faster than many models
anticipated, with hotter summers, shifting rainfall and compounding
risks from fire, heat and smoke.9
That makes decisions about building standards, rental protections,
insurance, planning codes, urban forests and public infrastructure as
consequential for residents’ day‑to‑day safety as decisions about the
territory’s next megawatt of renewable generation.9
Advocates warn that if the strategy does not lock in stronger
adaptation measures by the mid‑2030s – from mandatory cool roofs and
higher energy performance to expanded green space in heat‑vulnerable
suburbs – the costs will show up in health statistics, lost
productivity and widening inequality.9
They argue that a credible plan for the next decade must combine
clear emissions trajectories with legally backed adaptation
benchmarks, transparent reporting and independent oversight, so that
no government can quietly let the framework drift while temperatures
climb.11
For now, though, the most tangible line in the sand is not a 2035
carbon budget but a consultation deadline: public submissions on the
ACT Climate Change Strategy 2026–35 close on 18 March 2026, a date
community groups describe as a final chance for Canberrans to demand a
plan with teeth before the shape of the next climate decade is
effectively locked in.6
References
- ACT Government – Developing the next ACT Climate
Change Strategy 2026–35 discussion paper
- ACT Climate Change Strategy targets and net zero
by 2045 commitment
- ACT Climate Change Strategy 2019–25 – 2025
emissions reduction target (50–60% below 1990)
- Conservation Council ACT Region – commentary on
2026–35 climate strategy as “vague placeholder”4
- Fossil Fuel Non‑Proliferation Treaty Initiative –
Exporting Harm: Australia’s fossil fuel expansion and climate
hypocrisy
- ACT Government – Climate Change Strategy
consultation dates (29 January–18 March 2026)
- AdaptNSW – Projected climate change impacts and
heatwaves in the ACT region
- ASBEC – Overview of ACT Climate Change Strategy
2019–2025 and interim targets
- AdaptNSW – Climate risks, health and adaptation
needs in the ACT
- ACT Greens – Commitments on electrification, gas
phase‑out and zero‑emissions fleets
- Climate Action Tracker – Australia’s policies,
offsets reliance and decarbonisation pathways
- ABC News – Australia projected to badly miss 2035
climate target of 62–70% cuts
- The Australia Institute – Nature Positive rhetoric
and fossil fuel approvals critique
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