If climate action from every country was as inadequate as Australia’s, the world would be on track for 4°C warming.
AAP
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Research from the University of Melbourne found if all countries’ climate action was as inadequate as Australia’s, the world would be on track for 4°C warming.
With an election on Saturday, lets dig into the major parties’ climate policies, and see how they track against Australia’s Paris commitments.
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The Liberal Party introduced the Climate Solutions Package in February 2019. The package includes a range of measures, but most notably a continuation of the Emissions Reduction Fund (ERF), which remains the coalition’s key climate policy.
The Climate Solutions Fund includes another $2 billion to be used for ERF auctions until 2030. The package does not include any plan to increase renewables beyond the current 23.5% 2020 target.
The package also retains Australia’s current emissions reduction target of 26%-28% below 2005 levels by 2030. This target falls far short of what is required to meet the Paris climate agreement goals.
• LABOR
Labor has released a Climate Change Action Plan that leads with a renewable energy target of 50% electricity generation by 2030, household rebates for solar batteries, and investment in energy efficiency.
Labor will extend the existing “safeguard mechanism” to function as a pollution cap for industry, while the agriculture sector will participate in a revived Carbon Farming Initiative.
Labor’s climate target will commit Australia to emission reductions of 45% on 2005 levels by 2030, and to reach net zero emissions by 2050.
Labor’s policy document states this target is informed by advice from the independent Climate Change Authority (CCA), yet the CCA’s 2015 targets review concluded Australia’s fair share of a global target for 2°C was an emissions reduction of between 40-60% below 2000 levels by 2030.
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Labor’s target is still inadequate from a global perspective and would not put Australia on track to meet its Paris commitments. But it is a big step forward from our current targets, and would at least bring Australia in line with the inadequate action pledged by the rest of the world – current global pledges put the world on track for 3°C warming.
• GREENS
The Greens are the only political party in Australia with climate policies that put forward targets that would enable us to meet our international obligations according to the science.
They have an emissions reduction target of 63-82% by 2030 and a trajectory to get emissions to net-zero by 2040. The Greens manifesto calls for a total transition away from fossil fuels.
Cost of climate (in)action
The Liberals claim their climate policies meet our climate commitments “without wrecking the economy” and have released economic modelling suggesting Labor’s 45% target will cost the economy billions.
This modelling has been widely debunked, and Labor’s budget costings show climate policies to have a cost of around $800 million to 2023.
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In light of the IPCC report on the urgency of limiting warming to 1.5°C, this may be a more salient point than the year on year costs of implementation of any near-term climate policy.
What are other countries doing?
Far greater ambition is required from all nations, including Australia, for the world to meet the goals of the Paris Agreement. The UN has invited Paris Agreement signatories to submit revised national targets in 2020.
Several countries are raising their national climate commitments. The UK Parliament has just declared a climate emergency and has been advised by its independent Committee on Climate Change to adopt a target of net-zero emissions by 2050.
The European Union has set an emission reductions target of 55% by 2030 and the EU Parliament has endorsed a net-zero climate target for 2050.
Nearer to home, on Wednesday the New Zealand prime minister introduced the Zero Carbon Bill, which calls for net-zero carbon-dioxide emissions by 2050, and creates a legal obligation to plan for supporting New Zealand towns and cities, business and farmers to adapt to increasingly severe storms, floods, fires and droughts caused by climate change.
While all of these actions are far more ambitious than Australia’s targets, the IPCC found net-zero emissions will need to be reached earlier than 2050 for a chance of limiting warming to 1.5°C without overshoot (overshoot risks potentially irreversible ecosystem loss).
So far no developed nation is taking seriously the equity considerations of the Paris Agreement, which require financial and technology support to help developing countries both reduce emissions and adapt to the already severe consequences of climate change.
Limiting warming to well below 2°C and aiming for 1.5°C as required by the Paris Agreement will indeed require that fossil fuel use declines to zero over the next few decades. This is a trajectory that governments around the world – the UK, the EU, NZ and others – are beginning to acknowledge.
If Australia sees more of the same in terms of climate policy we will inevitably continue our dismal track record of inaction – with devastating consequences.
Links
- The Climate Change Election: Where Do The Parties Stand On The Environment?
- Fixing the gap between Labor's greenhouse gas goals and their policies
- Keeping warming below 1.5℃ is possible - but we can't rely on removing carbon from the atmosphere
- 'Appalling' Policy Inaction Draws Former UN Climate Leader Into Federal Election Campaign
- Carry-Over Credits And Carbon Offsets Are Hot Topics This Election – But What Do They Actually Mean?
- 'Not Adequate': Experts Rate Australian Political Response To Extinction Crisis
- Government Sits On Secret Modelling Of Climate Policy Costs
- Cloudy Outlook On Climate Change Ahead Of Election
- News Corp's Climate Campaign
- Australia’s Politics May Be Changing With Its Climate
- Climate Cuts, Cover-Ups And Censorship
- Shorten fails to specify cost of Labor's renewables policy when asked four times
- Barnaby Joyce won't rule out dumping Renewable Energy Target
- Climate change costings that don't count the cost of inaction are worthless
- Climate change takes centre stage in Australia's election
- Peter Garrett urges Bill Shorten to declare climate emergency if Labor wins
- Coalition gets a miserable 4% on climate change policy scorecard
- Hyundai warns of 'fear-mongering' over electric cars in Australia election
- 'Not adequate': experts rate Australian political response to extinction crisis
- Coalition 'tying themselves in knots' on electric vehicles, Mike Cannon-Brookes says
- Tim Flannery: people are shocked about climate change but they should be angry
- 'Alarming' rise in Queensland tree clearing as 400,000 hectares stripped
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