02/12/2015

Climate Change Protestors Stage Sit-In At Parliament House

Fairfax

Protesters stage a sit-in at Parliament House on Wednesday. Photo: Colin Bettles

Protesters swarmed Parliament House to demand action on climate change on Wednesday.
More than one hundred people participated in the lunchtime sit-in in the marble foyer, including Greens leader Richard Di Natale.
Protesters chanted "the whole world is watching" as the severely outnumbered security guards began to pull people out.
Among them was 93-year-old World War II veteran and environmental activist Bill Ryan, who was escorted out with his walker.
Aboriginal elder Aunty Mabel of the Bailai people was the last to be ejected as demonstrators reconvened outside parliament.
"The people who have had the task of caring for our earth have stuffed up. Those in power who sit in those chambers have the power and responsibility to make those decisions [to improve our environment] happen. Put the planet before profits," one protester read out to raucous cheers.
The so-termed People's Parliament comes as climate change talks continue in Paris.
Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull arrived back in Australia on Wednesday morning after rejecting a statement of support for reform of fossil fuel subsidies.

COP21: A Potluck Dinner in Paris

THE NEW YORKER - John Cassidy

The decision to forgo a formal treaty was made partly to assuage the concerns of the world’s two biggest polluters, the United States and China. Credit Photograph by Laurent Vu / Pool / SIPA USA via AP

Now that the 2015 United Nations Climate Change Conference is under way in Paris, two main issues arise: Will an agreement to reduce carbon levels in the atmosphere be reached? And, if so, will it do any good? The answer to the first question is: almost certainly. The answer to the second question is: some, but not enough.
The good news is that, after more than twenty years of trying, the nations of the world are finally closing in on a deal that has the backing of all the major polluters. This much was clear from Monday’s opening ceremony, which attracted a host of global leaders. If politicians like President Obama, Chinese President Xi Jinping, and Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi didn’t think a positive outcome was likely, they wouldn’t have made the trip.
Of course, it is always possible that the negotiations, which are scheduled to last for nearly two weeks, will break down, as they did in 2009, when a similar meeting was held in Copenhagen. For at least two reasons, though, that seems unlikely. First, despite talk of the need to reach a legally binding agreement on climate change, the Paris conference isn’t aimed at producing an actual treaty. While some parts of the deal, such as the arrangements for monitoring the targeted emission levels, may well be codified, participation in the process will be voluntary, and enforcement will rely largely on peer pressure. The hundred and ninety-three participants in the talks have given up on seeking to forge a direct successor to the 1997 Kyoto treaty, which saw most advanced nations (but not the United States) agree to limit emissions. Instead, they have agreed to hold a huge potluck dinner, in which each country brings what it can.
The U.S. delegation is bearing a promise that, by 2025, the United States will reduce greenhouse-gas emissions by twenty-eight per cent compared to the 2005 level. The European Union says that, by 2030, it will cut emissions by forty per cent compared to the 1990 level. Russia is pledging a cut of twenty-five to thirty per cent relative to the 1990 baseline. Mexico says that, by 2030, it will reduce emissions by at least a quarter relative to a “business-as-usual scenario.” Malaysia says that, by 2030, it will have cut emissions by forty-five per cent relative to the 2005 level. And so on. (The Web site Carbon Brief has compiled a useful list of these pledges, and has analyzed a number of them in depth.)
The decision to forgo a formal treaty was made partly to assuage the concerns of the world’s two biggest polluters, the United States and China. With the Republicans controlling the Senate, there was virtually no chance of a treaty being ratified in this country. Not much has changed in this regard. In 1997, when many advanced countries signed the Kyoto treaty, the first concerted global effort to limit carbon emissions, a frustrated Clinton Administration didn’t even bother sending it to Capitol Hill.
China, for its part, has always insisted that countries should be allowed to tackle climate change in their own way and at their own pace, rather than being subjected to binding international agreements. (In Copenhagen six years ago, China’s recalcitrance was a major reason for the failure to reach a deal.) Speaking in Paris on Monday, Xi repeated this message. What has changed—and what, more than anything else, makes a deal in Paris possible—is that the Chinese government, for its own reasons, has decided to get (somewhat) more serious about tackling air pollution and global warming. The key moment came a year ago, when China agreed to cap its over-all carbon emissions by 2030. Since then, senior party officials have said that this date could be brought forward to 2025.
With the potluck-dinner model in place and China having confirmed its attendance at the table, finalizing the agreement will come down to securing the backing of India and other developing countries. In an op-ed in Monday’s Financial Times, Prime Minister Modi reminded everyone about the basic inequity at the heart of climate-change policy: advanced nations, such as the United States, industrialized by burning lots of fossil fuels, and now they are asking developing countries to forgo this path. “Justice demands that, with what little carbon we can still safely burn, developing countries are allowed to grow,” Modi wrote.
That is the grand principle at stake. The practical sticking point is money. At Copenhagen, rich countries said that they would provide a hundred billion dollars a year in aid and investment to help poor countries develop greener forms of power and adapt to climate change. Modi and other leaders from the developing world are understandably keen to nail down this commitment and see it expanded. Ultimately, however, it seems unlikely that they will block an agreement. “India will do its part for success in Paris,” Modi concluded in the Financial Times.
But what would success mean for the big picture? To the skeptics, not very much at all. They say the deal under consideration is too small, too vague, and too late to prevent a dangerous rise in temperatures. “The underlying condition continues to deteriorate,” Dieter Helm, an economist at Oxford University, writes in a new edition of “The Carbon Crunch,” his 2012 book. “In 2012 another two parts per million (PPM) of carbon dioxide (CO2) were added to the atmosphere, followed by another 2.8 ppm in 2013 and roughly the same again in 2014. Roll forward to 2030 and the total will be close to 450 ppm, up from the current 400 and close to twice pre-industrial levels—a Paris agreement notwithstanding.”
Originally, the Paris agreement was meant to hold the global rise in temperatures to two degrees centigrade (3.6 degrees Fahrenheit), relative to pre-industrial times. Largely because of all the coal-fired power stations that China, India, and other countries have built in recent years, many climate-change experts now believe that, regardless of what happens in the next couple of weeks, this ceiling will be breached. Scientists associated with the United Nations recently acknowledged that, even if the Paris summit is a success, it will likely only be enough to contain warming to 2.7 degrees Celsius. And many others involved in tackling climate change think that this is an optimistic assessment. “It’s nice for people to talk about two degrees,” Bill Gates told The Economists Joel Budd recently. “But we don’t even have the commitments that are going to keep us below four degrees of warming.”
Defenders of the Paris approach say that it’s the best option that is politically feasible. Efforts to produce a more rigid, top-down multinational agreement have foundered, as have moves to promote a global tax on carbon, which many economists advocate. The potluck-dinner approach has gained widespread support, and it could arguably establish a common framework that can be strengthened going forward. Once each country has issued its carbon-emissions target, its progress will be monitored by U.N. experts. Further summits will be held, and new targets could be issued. Over time, the optimists say, the process of tackling carbon emissions will “ratchet up.”
Perhaps that will happen. For now, though, there is no agreement on how the ratchet will work. The United Kingdom and other European countries are said to be pressing for summits to be held held every five years, at which new targets would be set. India and other developing countries appear to be resisting a fixed timetable. And even if such an arrangement is reached, there remains the question of how much time the world has left in which to reduce carbon emissions.
Until recently, the academic consensus was that, given current emissions rates, we had about thirty years left before burning more carbon would cause a dangerous rise in temperatures. (In this context, “dangerous” is defined as an upward move of more than two degrees centigrade.) Now, though, some experts are suggesting that the trigger point could arrive in fifteen to twenty years. Whatever happens in Paris, it is generally agreed that over-all emissions will still be rising in the period leading up to 2030, which means that, if the pessimists are right about the trigger point, it could be too late to prevent a drastic shift in the earth’s climate.
Of course, climate-change science is imprecise, and the long-term forecasts that it generates can always be challenged. At best, they are educated estimates. But one thing seems clear: in tackling this mother of all economic externalities, humankind is leaving it late.

Australia Approved Coalmine Because It Isn't A 'Neo-Colonialist' Power, Greg Hunt Claims

The Guardian - Lenore Taylor

Environment minister defends approval of Indian company Adani’s $16bn Carmichael mine, saying ‘poorest should be able to make their own decisions’
Abbot Point, surrounded by wetlands and coral reefs, would become the world’s largest coal port should the Carmichael mine and the associated port expansion go ahead. Photograph: Tom Jefferson/Greenpeace

The Australian government approved Adani’s controversial $16bn Carmichael coalmine in Queensland because it was not a “neo-colonialist”power that tried to tell poor countries what to do, environment minister Greg Hunt has told a side event at the Paris climate summit.
Hunt was speaking about the coalition’s Direct Action policy at an OECD event on different climate policies when he was challenged by a questioner about why the government had approved the Adani mine given the huge quantity of emissions its coal would create.
“This is not an Australian government project, it is a private sector firm from India and ... I thought we were over neocolonial moment where the wealthy decide what happens to the poor,” Hunt countered.
“I hope you would agree the poorest countries should be able to decide their own energy future. I am not a neo-colonialist. I think the poorest should be able to make their own decisions,” he said.
And he said the federal environment law allowed him to judge projects according to strict criteria, but greenhouse emissions weren’t one of them.
“It is not our project, there is no federal money, the federal government of Australia acts as a judge not as an advocate and I think it is very important that individual countries set their targets and make their own decisions,” he said.
Conservation groups have asked the federal court to overturn the Hunt’s approval Carmichael because he did not take into account the impact on the Great Barrier Reef of the greenhouse gases emitted when the coal is burned.
A recent report designed to highlight the quantity of emissions that would be created by the coal from the mine found that it would create annual emissions similar to those from countries like Malaysia and Austria and more emissions than New York City.
Others on the panel, including the head of the renewable energy division of the International Energy Agency, Paolo Frankl, said “reverse auctions” like Australia’s Direct Action scheme were proving very efficient around the world, especially in financing renewable energy projects. (Australia’s scheme has not been used for this purpose, but has mainly financed land use, waste and energy efficiency projects.) But he said a carbon price was usually also needed to drive a long term price signal.
Asked if reverse auctions could be used on their own to give business the long term price signals, Frankl said “it can but it would not be very useful. If you look at Brazil and Australia that is exactly what they are doing now, but in addition to that there should be a carbon price which could give an additional signal ... we need some long term price signal but also some short term signals.”
Hunt is leading Australia’s delegation in the first week of the two-week Paris climate summit which aims to reach an agreement to progressively increase the ambition of global efforts to reduce greenhouse gases out to 2030.
The foreign minister, Julie Bishop, will take over the negotiating lead next weekend. The talks began in earnest on Tuesday after a day of speeches by 150 world leaders designed to give them purpose and momentum.
Over the two weeks delegates will seek to overcome deep divisions over issues including whether rich and poor countries must face the same rules for reporting and checking their emission reductions and the amount of financing developed countries will provide to help poor nations reduce their emissions and deal with the impact of climate change.

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No Matter What He Says In Paris, Turnbull Is Still Handcuffed To The Climate Change Dinosaurs

The Guardian - Larissa Waters

Turnbull’s speech at the Paris climate change conference was a stunning example of fine but empty rhetoric, but we’re still left with the status quo

‘As Malcolm Turnbull demonstrated at the Paris climate change conference this week, the climate dinosaurs of the coalition parties still pull the strings’ Photograph: Francois Mori/AP

Saying one thing and doing the opposite is clearly not a smart political strategy but it seems to be becoming the prime minister’s modus operandi, especially on climate change policy.
As Malcolm Turnbull demonstrated in Paris this week, the climate dinosaurs of the coalition parties still pull the strings on what he can actually do to tackle global warming. On the other hand, what he says about climate change does appear to be crafted with the intensifying public momentum for climate action in mind.
The government’s many climate deniers are determined to stick with Tony Abbott’s weak climate policies. The Nationals handcuffed Malcolm Turnbull to those dangerous policies in their coalition agreement which locks him in for the life of his prime ministership.
You only need to look at the conservative revolt led by Ian Macfarlane, Barnaby Joyce and George Christensen on Monday that prevented Australia from signing a New-Zealand-led agreement of 40 countries to phase out fossil fuels subsidies. Australia was left looking isolated as an obvious wrecker, content to keep propping up coal at the expense of taxpayers and the clean energy industry.
The anti-science, coal-obsessed ranks of the backbench are completely out of touch with the vast majority of Australians. More than 170,000 people marched across the country on the weekend and about two-thirds of Australians want the government to commit to significant climate pollution cuts. Stuck between the two opposing forces, Malcolm Turnbull appears to have let the dinosaurs control his actions while trying to sound like he speaks for all Australians. Surely though, he realises this isn’t going to work – Australians aren’t stupid and don’t like to be treated as though they are.
The prime minister’s speech in Paris was a stunning example of fine but empty rhetoric. He made what sounded like three announcements but at the end we were left with the status quo.
Firstly, the prime minister announced Australia would ratify the second commitment period of the Kyoto Protocol. This was basically confirmation that Australia will meet its measly 5% target in climate pollution reduction to 2020.
When the target is that pathetically low, meeting it is nothing to crow about. This is especially galling because this success is partly due to the carbon price that Tony Abbott abolished and the renewable energy target which he cut, supported by Malcolm Turnbull.
Secondly, Malcolm Turnbull announced Australia would double investment in clean energy innovation over the next five years, joining the Barack Obama and Bill Gates-led plan, Mission Innovation. While this sounds very exciting, it’s completely at odds with the Turnbull government’s plan, reiterated only this week, to abolish the two government bodies driving clean energy investment and innovation.
The Australian Renewable Energy Agency (Arena) and the Clean Energy Finance Corporation (CEFC) are both incredible success stories in clean energy innovation. Together they will invest $23bn of public investment in renewable energy and leverage much more private investment over the next 10 years. The CEFC actually makes money for taxpayers through clean energy investment. If it wasn’t for the Senate blocking the government’s plan to scrap both the CEFC and Arena, their amazing work in powering a national clean energy revolution would be lost.
Thirdly, the prime minister announced Australia would contribute some more money from our existing aid budget to help developing countries deal with global warming. Our aid budget is already at a historic low because of the current government’s savage cuts. The slight increase in the proportion of aid funding to be directed to climate finance pales in comparison to the generous announcements of Canada, the UK and Germany.
What’s more, the Turnbull government’s measly contribution fails to live up to our responsibility as the wealthiest country in the Pacific, a region already suffering some of the worst impacts of global warming.
Australia has the potential to be a regional leader in clean energy and climate change adaptation. Not only is it the right thing to do by our regional neighbours and our environment but it will bring our economy into the 21st century. While new coal mines are increasingly set to become stranded assets, clean energy technology is powering ahead offering the jobs of the future. The prime minister needs to stop letting his climate-denying masters get in the way.

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