New Matilda - Liam McLoughlin
A recent
ReachTel poll commissioned by Greenpeace Australia
found that for the voters of Wentworth – former Prime Minister Malcolm
Turnbull’s old seat – tackling climate change was their number one
priority. Here's a list of Liberal Party decisions on climate change over the last five years.
|
Tony Abbott eats an onion. Just because. |
Prime Minister Tony Abbott
- Abolishes key ministerial positions of climate change and science – 16 September 2013
- Abolishes the Climate Commission – 19 September 2013
- Denies there is a link between climate change and more severe bush
fires and accuses a senior UN official of “talking through their hat” – 23 October 2013
- Abolishes the Antarctic Animal Ethics Committee which ensured
research on animals in the Antarctic complies with Australian standards
– 8 November 2013
- Cuts 600 jobs at the CSIRO – 8 November 2013
- Abandons Australia’s emission reduction targets – 12 November, 2013
- Downgrades national environment laws by giving approval powers to state premiers – 9 December 2013
- Removes the community’s right to challenge decisions where the
government has ignored expert advice on threatened species impacts – 9 December 2013
- Approves the largest coal port in the world in the Great Barrier Reef World Heritage Area – 10 December 2013
- Approves Clive Palmer’s mega coal mine in the Galilee Basin which opponents say will severely damage Great Barrier Reef – 11 December 2013
- Overturns the “critically endangered” listing of the Murray Darling Basin – 11 December 2013
- Scraps the COAG Standing Council on Environment and Water – 13 December 2013
- Starts dismantling Australia’s world leading marine protection system – 13 December 2013
- Axes funding for animal welfare – 17 December 2013
- Defunds the Environmental Defenders Office which is a network of
community legal centres providing free advice on environmental law – 17 December 2013
- Scraps the Home Energy Saver Scheme which helps struggling low income households cut their electricity bills – 17 December 2013
- Cuts funding to the Energy Efficiency Opportunities Programme which
makes it mandatory for large energy-using-businesses to improve their
efficiency –17 December, 2013
- Requests the delisting of World Heritage status for Tasmanian forests – 21 December 2013
- Breaks his promise to provide a customs vessel to monitor whaling operations in the Southern Ocean – 23 December 2013
- Defunds all international environmental programs, the International
Labour Organisation and cuts funding to a range of international aid
programs run by NGOs such as Save the Children, Oxfam, CARE Australia
and Caritas – 18 January 2014
- Exempts Western Australia from national environment laws to facilitate shark culling – 21 January 2014
- Appoints a climate change skeptic to head a review of our renewable energy target – 17 February 2014
- Blames carbon pricing for the closure of Alcoa smelters and rolling
mills and the loss of nearly 1,000 jobs, despite the fact the company
states it had no bearing on their decision – 19 February 2014
- Axes funding earmarked to save the Sumatran rhinoceros from extinction – 28 February 2014
- Cuts hundreds of jobs at the CSIRO – 14 March 2014
- Cuts 480 jobs from the Environment Department which help protect places such as Kakadu, Antarctica and the Great Barrier Reef – 7 April 2014
- Scraps the Australian Renewable Energy Agency (ARENA) which was set
up to support new and emerging renewable technologies and in doing so
breaks an election promise – 13 May 2014
- Axes industry and community clean energy programs including the Low
Emissions Technology Demonstration Fund, the National Low Emission Coal
Initiative, Energy Efficiency Programmes, the National Solar Schools
Plan, Energy Efficiency Information Grants and Low Carbon Communities – 13 May 2014
- Cuts Australia’s Animal Welfare Strategy – 13 May 2014
- Rips a further $111.4 million over four years out of the operating budget of the CSIRO – 13 May 2014
- Reduces funding to the Australian Institute for Marine Science – 13 May 2014
- Breaks a promise to have one million more solar roofs across Australia and at least 25 solar towns – 13 May 2014
- Breaks a promise to spend $2.55 billion on the Emissions Reduction Fund by committing less than half this amount in the budget – 13 May 2014
- Terminates the Office of Water Science research programme – 13 May, 2014
- Slashes the Biodiversity Fund – 13 May, 2014
- Scraps the National Water Commission – 13 May, 2014
- Axes the carbon tax with no viable policy to address climate change or Australia’s emission targets – 17 July, 2014
- Repeals the mining tax on the profits of big coal and iron ore companies – 2 September 2014
- Cuts spending on science and innovation to the lowest levels since the data was first published – 07 October, 2014
- Describes coal as “good for humanity” while opening a coal mine in Queensland – 13 October, 2014
- Refuses to contribute to the fund Green Climate Fund, which Abbott
described the year before as “socialism masquerading as
environmentalism” – 17 November, 2014
- Cuts CSIRO funding, which means that CSIRO will lose 1/5 of its workforce – 24 November, 2014
- Cuts the Climate Adaptation Outlook Independent Expert Group – 15 December 2014
- Cuts the Biological Diversity Advisory Committee – 15 December 2014
- Abolishes the Subcommittee on Animal Health Laboratory Standards – 15 December 2014
- Abolishes the Antarctic Science Advisory Committee – 15 December 2014
- Abolishes the Emissions Intensive–-Trade Exposed Expert Advisory Committee –15 December 2014
- Disbands the Commonwealth Environmental Water Stakeholder Reference Panel – 15 December 2014
- Abolishes the COAG Standing Council on Environment and Water – 15 December 2014
- Abolishes the Bureau of Meteorology Water Accounting Standards Board – 15 December 2014
- Abolishes the National Marine Mammal Scientific Committee – 15 December 2014
- Disbands the National Marine Mammal Advisory Committee – 15 December 2014
- Abolishes the National Landscapes Reference Committee – 15 December 2014
- Abolishes the Technical Advisory Committee for the Coal Mining Abatement Technology Support Package – 15 December 2014
- Abolishes the Marine Council – 15 December 2014
- Appoints a climate skeptic who praised Rupert Murdoch as the
“starting point for green innovation” to the position of Parliamentary
Secretary to the Minister of the Environment – 21 December 2014
- Cuts $12.5 million from the National Heritage Trust – 12 May 2015
- Establishes a Commissioner for Wind Farms – 24 June 2015
- Slashes the renewable energy target – 24 June 2015
- Intense lobbying keeps Great Barrier Reef off UNESCO’s world
heritage in-danger list despite many government decisions which threaten
it – 2 July 2015
- Directs the Clean Energy Finance Corporation to stop investing in wind power – 12 July 2015
- Bans the Clean Energy Finance Corporation from investing in roof top solar panels and other small scale solar energy – 12 July 2015
- Reduces Australia’s carbon emissions reduction target – 11 August 2015
- Tries to introduce laws to stop citizens exercising their legal rights to stop big developments that damage the environment – 19 August 2015
|
Former Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull. (IMAGE: Veni, Flickr). |
Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull
- Approves Carmichael coal mine – 16 October 2015
- Environment Minister Greg Hunt claims selling India Australian coal will cut carbon emissions – 10 Dec 2015
- Approves Abbot Point Coal Terminal expansion – 22 December 2015
- Presides over a drop in Australia’s ranking on the Environmental Performance Index of 10 places – 28 January 2016
- Approves logging in Murray Valley National Park – 28 February 2016
- Tries to loan Adani $1 billion to build a railway link to the Carmichael mine and promises to “fix” native title problems – 11 April 2017
- Describes Labor’s emissions trading scheme as “jobs destroying”, a
handbrake on the economy, leading to “much higher energy prices.” – 27 April 2016
- Says coal will be important for “many, many decades to come” – 25 October 2016
- Seeks changes to the Environment Protection and Biodiversity
Conservation Act to stop conservation groups challenging environmental
ministerial decisions – October 31, 2016
- Says “if anyone had a vested interest in showing you that you could do really smart, clean things with coal, it would be us” – 1 February, 2017
- Opens $5 billion infrastructure fund for “clean-coal” power stations – 3 February 2017
- Hires Sid Marris, former head of climate and environment at the
Minerals Council of Australia, to be his climate and energy adviser – 3 February 2017
- Scott Morrison brings a lump of coal to question time and says “This is coal. Don’t be afraid. Don’t be scared.” – 9 February 2017
- Ignores advice that renewable energy was not to blame for South Australian blackouts – 13 February 2017
- Oversees 3.4% rise in emissions within 12 months and 7.5% increase
since the Abbott-Turnbull government scrapped the carbon price – 01 March 2017
- Diverts funds from Clean Energy Finance Corporation to fund coal with carbon capture and storage – 31 May 2017
- Stops releasing pollution data that used to be announced on a quarterly basis – 7 July 2017
- Attacks South Australian renewable energy policy as “ideology and idiocy in equal measure” – 14 August 2017
- Lobbies AGL to delay closure of ageing Liddell coal power station for another five years – 5 September 2017
- Dumps Clean Energy Target – 17 October 2017
- Plans to reduce environmental spending to less than 60% of 2013-2014 budget – 13 December 2017
- Data released in the week before Christmas shows highest greenhouse
gas emissions on record when land use change emissions excluded – 19 December 2017
- This data shows emissions increasing to 2030 and beyond – 19 December 2017
- Declares climate policies are a big success – 19 December 2017
- Climate policy review loosens the safeguard mechanism that sets limits on pollution – 19 December 2017
- Government fails to list a single piece of critical habitat for
protection despite 1800 species and ecological communities being
identified as threatened in Australia – 6 Match 2018
- Backs Pauline Hanson’s motion for new coal-fired power stations – 27 June 2018
- Turnbull’s signature emissions reduction policy, the National Energy Guarantee, described as having ‘no benefit’ to emissions – 18 July 2018.
- Personally approves $443m fund for Great Barrier Reef Foundation, an organisation with ties to BHP, Shell and Peabody Energy – 31 July 2018.
- Removes emissions reduction target from National Energy Guarantee – 20 August 1018
|
Scott Morrison is sworn in as the 30th Australian Prime Minister. |
Prime Minister Scott Morrison
- Appoints Angus Taylor, long-time campaigner against the Renewable
Energy Target and a fierce critic of wind energy, as Minister for Energy
– 26 August 2018
- Appoints Melissa Price, a former general counsel for Crosslands
Resources, which owns the Jack Hills iron ore project in Western
Australia, as Minister for the Environment – 26 August 2018
- Appoints Matt Canavan, who doubts the importance of climate change
mitigation and is a strong advocate of Adani’s Carmichael coal mine but
dismisses the battery storage facility, the Hornsdale Power Reserve, as
the “Kim Kardashian of the energy world”, as Minister for Resources – 26 August 2018
- Angus Taylor indicates more taxpayer money for existing coal and gas – 30 August 2018
- Revealed that the Marine Park Authority had to scale back surveys in
2017, a year of massive coral bleaching, due to lack of government
funds – 2 September 2018
- Angus Taylor says there is too much wind and solar in the electricity grid – 5 September 2018
- Tries to water down climate change resolution at Pacific Islands forum – 6 September 2018
- Union tells Senate inquiry that 87% of members who work in
threatened species management in the environment department and other
government agencies thought Australia’s effectiveness in protecting
critical habitat was poor or very poor – 7 September 2018
- Resources Minister Matt Canavan says Paris agreement “doesn’t
actually bind us to anything in particular” and doesn’t stop Australia
building new coal plants – 7 September 2018
- PM says National Energy Guarantee “is dead” – 8 September 2018
- Tony Abbott advocates scrapping of renewable energy subsidies – 11 September 2018
- Report shows Australia’s transport emissions rose 3.4% from December 2016-December 2017 – 13 September 2018
- Angus Taylor announces Morrison government won’t be replacing the renewable energy target “with anything” beyond 2020 – 18 September 2018
- Approves private tourism development with helicopter access in Tasmanian world heritage wilderness – 31 August 2018
- Morrison says Australia will meet its Paris emissions targets “at a
canter” despite no emissions reductions policies and statements from the
Energy Security Board to the contrary – 5 September 2018
- Australia receives bottom three ranking for environmental policy among wealthy nations – 18 September 2018
- Government tells Great Barrier Reef scientists to focus on projects
which make the government look good and encourage more corporate
donations – 26 September 2018
- Releases data showing March quarter increase in emissions of 1.3% on
a Friday afternoon, which was a public holiday in Victoria and the same
day as the release of the banking sector royal commission interim
report – 28 September 2018
- Describes $444m Great Barrier Reef Foundation grant as the “right financial decision” – 1 October 2018.
- Data reveals 770,000 hectares (three times the size of the ACT) of
forests in the Great Barrier Reef catchment zone have been cleared since
Tony Abbott was elected in 2013 – 4 October 2018.
- Senate inquiry into threatened species told Australia’s environment
laws have been “white-anted with loopholes” and hears of “massive and
pervasive non-compliance with legislation” – 8 October 2018
- PM rules out providing more money for global climate conferences and “all that sort of nonsense”– 8 October 2018
- Deputy Prime Minister Michael McCormack says Australia should
“absolutely use and exploit its coal reserves” despite IPCC warnings of
climate catastrophe and says Australia wouldn’t change climate policy
because of “some sort of report” – 9 October 2018
- Matt Canavan responds to the IPCC calls for phasing out coal by 2050
to avoid the worst impacts of climate change by saying “many argue that
coal markets are in structural decline when nothing could be further
from the truth” and “our coal is the envy of the world and we should
promote it proudly” – 9 October 2018
- Melissa Price responds to the IPCC report by saying “every year
there’s new technology with respect to coal and what it contributes to
emissions. So I think to say it’s got to be phased out by 2050 is
drawing a very long bow” – 9 October 2018
- Angus Taylor says the government would “not be distracted from our
goal of lowering power prices for Australian households and small
business” and “coal will continue to play a vital role in our energy
mix, now and into the future” – 10 October 2018
- Former Energy Minister Josh Frydenberg responded to the grave IPCC
warnings with “If we take coal out of our energy system, the lights will
go out on the East Coast of Australia” – 9 October 2018
- Chairman of Coalition’s backbench energy committee Craig Kelly says the government needs to axe renewable energy subsidies – 16 October 2018
- Melissa Price reported to have told the former president of Kiribati
at a dinner in Canberra ““I know why you are here, it’s for the cash.
For the Pacific, it’s always about the cash. I have my cheque book here,
how much do you want?” then accused of misleading Parliament over it – 17 October 2018
Links
No comments :
Post a Comment