31/05/2016

Decoding The Gibberish Around Climate Change Policies This Election

NEWS.com.auCharis Chang

Labor leader Bill Shorten visits the Great Barrier Reef which is under threat from climate change. Picture: Jason Edwards
IF YOU are confused about what the major parties are doing about environment policy, you're not the only one. The subject has been bogged down in claims and counterclaims and no where was this more apparent than during a leaders debate on Sunday, and one held at the National Press Club earlier this month between the environment ministers.
How do you make sense of it all? Here's our easy guide to understanding what's going on.

WHY EVERYONE CARES ABOUT THE 'TARGET'
Both Labor and Liberal parties go on and on about meeting targets and this is very important to them because it shows they are 'doing enough'.
The main aim of the game is to limit global warming to "well below" two degrees. It's a target that countries around the world committed to as part of the Paris Agreement.
Just to be clear, climate change has been identified as the biggest risk to future of the Great Barrier Reef, something that Opposition Leader Bill Shorten acknowledged today saying it supports 70,000 jobs and is worth $5.7 billion to the Australian economy.
Two degrees of warming could still see global sea levels rise by as much as half a metre by the end of the century compared to 1985-2005. It would increase the intensity and frequency of bushfires, flooding and droughts. So countries want to stay below it.
The difficulty is how to do this.

WHAT THEY'RE PROMISING
Both major parties committed to a previous target of between five to 25 per cent below 2000 levels by 2020.
But last month Labor revealed an ambitious new goal to cut emissions by 45 per cent by 2030, in line with what the Climate Change Authority recommended to keep warming below two degrees.
The Turnbull Government has also upped the ante, promising to reduce carbon emissions by between 26 and 28 per cent by 2030, based on 2005 levels. But this is well below the authority's recommendation of 45 per cent to 65 per cent.
So far the government believes it will achieve a five per cent reduction and meet its original goal.
But whoever wins the election is going to have to really ramp up their efforts if they have any chance of meeting their new targets.
Labor leader Bill Shorten visits the Great Barrier Reef. Picture: Jason Edwards
Labor leader Bill Shorten visits the Great Barrier Reef. Picture: Jason Edwards Source: News Corp Australia
HOW LABOR WILL MEET TARGETS
OK, we all know what happened last time someone dared to bring in a carbon tax (remember 'ditch the witch'?). Now only referred to in hushed whispers, both parties want to stay well away from any suggestion they could bring in a new tax.
Labor has been a bit braver, openly putting their support behind an emissions trading scheme. This forces companies to bid for permits that allow them to emit carbon emissions. These permits can be traded, used or saved for the future. It also wants Australia to get half of its electricity from renewable energy by 2030.
But details of exactly how its emissions trading scheme will operate after its first two years are vague.
In contrast the Coalition has been careful to stay well away from any suggestion the government's policy could even transition one day to a trading scheme.
It wasn't always this way, former Liberal prime minister John Howard promised to bring one in during the 2007 election. He lost and the rest is history.
But you can't blame the leaders for being a bit sensitive over the matter, PM Malcolm Turnbull lost the Liberal leadership the first time round, over his support for Labor's scheme, while Labor lost the election after it introduced a carbon tax.

TARGET TRICKERY

Australia is one of a number of countries that also supports a 1.5 degree (non-binding) target and this is where it has been accused of trickery.
It agreed to support the tougher target in exchange for other countries allowing it to widen the definition of "emissions".
Carbon emissions from industrial and other sources have actually been increasing but Australia has managed to meet its emissions reduction targets partly because it's now allowed to include changes in land use.
Environment Minister Greg Hunt and representatives from the Coalition's Green Army. Picture: Steve Tanner
Environment Minister Greg Hunt and representatives from the Coalition's Green Army. Picture: Steve Tanner Source: News Corp Australia
The rate of land clearing in Australia has declined since the 1990s and this is now counted towards the country's emissions reduction target.
Lower electricity demand and the closure of heavy manufacturing has also helped.

SO GIVE IT TO ME STRAIGHT, WHAT IS 'DIRECT ACTION'?

Here's where it becomes complicated, but bear with me.
The government has said it will reduce emissions through its "Direct Action Scheme".
Some people hate this scheme because it basically involves a huge pool of money ($2.5 billion over four years to be exact) being handed to polluters (mines, farmers etc) to encourage them to stop polluting.
It basically reverses the situation with the carbon tax, where polluters had to pay the government if they polluted.
But Environment Minister Greg Hunt told the National Press Club recently that the program was working. So far the government has purchased 143 million tonnes of carbon abatement using $1.7 billion. This prices carbon at just over $12 per tonne.
In contrast Mr Hunt said Labor's policy would not actually reduce emissions in Australia.
"That is the dirty secret at the heart of their policy ... They are purchasing overseas," Mr Hunt said. However, he would not rule out doing this as well, saying only that the government would do the "bulk of the lifting in Australia".
But some don't think Australia can actually meet its emissions targets using the government's scheme.
Shadow environment minister Mark Butler said Australia was pretty much the only major advanced economy where pollution levels were going up.
Analysis of government data has predicted pollution will rise by about six per cent between now and 2020, compared to dropping eight per cent while Labor was in office.
During the leaders debate on Sunday, the Prime Minister said the government expected to exceed its original target of reducing emissions by five per cent, by nearly 80 million tonnes.
But in order to meet its new 2030 target the government will have to reduce emissions by a further 900 million tonnes between 2020 and 2030.
The Climate Institute think tank has calculated that it could cost a whopping $16 billion to $37 billion a year for Australia to reach its new 2030 target using Direct Action, according to The Guardian.
This is a huge jump from the $2.5 billion over four years that the fund has access to now.

I KEEP HEARING ABOUT A MYSTERIOUS 'SAFEGUARD MECHANISM'?

The 'safeguard mechanism' is due to start in July and has been described as an emissions trading scheme by stealth, but you won't catch the government admitting this.
The scheme will help the government to achieve a five per cent cut in emissions by 2020, and puts a cap on how much big polluters can omit. Mr Hunt has said it would cover 50 per cent of emissions in Australia.
Critics of the government's policy say the safeguard mechanism isn't strict enough to prevent emissions increases.
On a wing and a prayer? Some say the government's environment policy won't meet emissions reduction targets. Picture: Tracey Nearmy
On a wing and a prayer? Some say the government's environment policy won't meet emissions reduction targets. Picture: Tracey Nearmy Source: AAP
"Eighty per cent of the liable entities won't be impacted at all by the safeguards mechanism," Mr Butler said, pointing to independent analysis that showed it would not cap, let alone reduce emissions from the 20 largest polluters.

REALLY, THEY JUST NEED TO AGREE

While both parties spruik the differences in their policies, there are similarities and increasing calls for them to agree on a common path.
Mr Butler acknowledged that there wasn't one democracy in the world that had a serious climate change policy without some level of agreement between major parties.
"There really is a challenge for the next parliament," he said.
"Otherwise, we'll be in the 2019 election ... again not having made progress in this area."
The Environment Minister admitted the question of bipartisanship was important while conceding it hadn't been sufficiently asked, nor answered, on any side.
Mr Hunt said he thought agreement could be found in his government's safeguard mechanism.
But Mr Butler isn't sold on that idea, saying Labor did not believe in taxpayer money purchasing emissions abatement.
Another sticking point is the emissions reduction target, with the government sticking to its 26 to 28 per cent by 2030 goal, while Labor wants to increase that to 45 per cent. It also wants to double the renewable energy target.
Mr Turnbull said bipartisanship was always desirable for long-term issues but Labor had not explained how much its plan would cost.
"My commitment is to ensure that Australia meets the target we agreed to in Paris," he said.
"When the global community agrees to higher targets, as I have no doubt it will, that we will meet them, too.
"But I believe we should move with the global community rather than taking unilateral action that will not influence global action that may be worthwhile from a political point of view."
Will Australia ever have a bipartisan agreement on climate policy? Picture: Tracey Nearmy
Will Australia ever have a bipartisan agreement on climate policy? Picture: Tracey Nearmy Source: AP

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