22/06/2020

(AU) The Coal Curse: Fuelling Division On Land Rights And Climate Change

Sydney Morning Herald - Judith Brett

Australians were generally happy to ride on the sheep’s back. Many of us are not at all happy to be riding in a coal cart. Australia has robust legal institutions and our politics is relatively democratic and accountable, but since the turn of the century fossil-­fuel miners have massively increased their influence over both sides of politics, and over state and federal governments.

Former PM Malcolm Turnbull returned to Canberra to listen to the Indonesian President address Parliament, but offered up his thoughts on building more coal fired power stations that's being pushed by some Nationals.


This article is an edited extract of
Judith Brett’s Quarterly Essay
The Coal Curse: Resources, Climate and Australia’s Future


The main game has been to head-off government action to reduce carbon emissions. This has weakened Australia’s willingness to play its part in reducing global warming, but the effects of the curse have spread beyond this, contributing to debilitating political polarisation.

The first Australians to suffer from the politics of the resource curse were Indigenous Australians. During the 1980s and 1990s, as the mining lobby effectively weakened legislation on land rights and native title, it developed the strategies it would later use to stymie effective government action on climate change.

When the Australian Mining Industries Council (AMIC) was formed in 1967, its initial aims were conventional industry matters, such as the rules governing foreign investment or the exchange rate. But mining was starting to face a quite different set of challenges.

The new mining boom was concentrated in Australia’s north, where many Indigenous Australians had continued to live on or close to their country. Some groups were demanding land rights, including the capacity to veto mining. Conservationists were pushing the government on mining’s environmental impact, and there was suspicion of the extent of foreign ownership.

Because mining employed few people, it could rely less on electoral pressure than other economic interest groups. The miners needed to convince the public that mining was crucial to national development and prosperity and so should not be curtailed.

In 1972, AMIC imposed a special levy on its members to fund campaigns focused on mass audiences rather than governments. Contacts in the media were fostered: articles and advertisements placed in newspapers, TV and radio; material prepared for public affairs programs.

In 1973, the new Labor government’s minister for minerals and energy, Rex Connor, commissioned a report on the contribution of mining to Australia’s welfare. The report by economist Tom Fitzgerald questioned the assumption that mining was inherently beneficial to the Australian economy and confirmed the industry’s conviction that it could not take the public’s support for granted.

Prime Minister John Howard (left) is shown around the expanded Olympic Dam mine in South Australia by Western Mining's Hugh Morgan in 1999. Morgan had begun his campaigns to influence politicians in the 1970s. Credit: Bryan Charlton

Western Mining’s Hugh Morgan, who in 1976 would become the company’s executive director, identified the report as a turning point both for himself and the industry. He realised, he later told Gerard Henderson, that to survive the mining industry had to persuade the community of its benefits and take on its adversaries. Ray Evans, a conservative engineer, was hired as a speechwriter to assist with these tasks.

By the early 1980s, Morgan and Evans were leading figures in what was then called the Australian New Right, a loose network of conservative men – and a few women – in high places, who combined a zeal for free-­market economics with opposition to the progressive causes of the 1970s, including land rights and environmentalism.

Through think tanks such as the Institute of Public Affairs and the Centre for Independent Studies, through newsletters and conferences, private dinners and informal gatherings, they developed arguments and strategies to counter what they saw as a dangerous left-­wing grip on public opinion.

“Politicians can only accept what is accepted in the public opinion polls, so you have to change public opinion,” Morgan told Paul Sheehan of The Sydney Morning Herald in 1985. By then he had become a vehement opponent of Indigenous land rights.

Gough Whitlam had taken a commitment to land rights to the 1972 election. In government, he appointed Justice Edward Woodward to conduct a royal commission into Aboriginal land rights in the Northern Territory. Woodward’s recommendations were revolutionary. Here are some:
  • all Aboriginal reserve lands were to be returned to their Aboriginal inhabitants;
  • Aboriginal people could claim vacant Crown land on the basis of traditional ties with the land;
  • and - most importantly for the subject of this essay - entry into Aboriginal land for mining and tourism required the consent of the local community.
Aboriginal people were to be given the possibility of vetoing mining developments, and mining companies would have to pay royalties to the traditional owners, though the Commonwealth retained the power to overrule any Aboriginal veto in the national interest.

After the Whitlam government was dismissed at the end of 1975, the incoming Liberal prime minister, Malcolm Fraser, generally supported Woodward’s recommendations, and his government passed the Aboriginal Land Rights (Northern Territory) Act in 1976. AMIC wanted the veto abolished and royalties reduced, as did the Northern Territory government, which saw the Act as a brake on development.

Then prime minister Malcolm Fraser (top) sits in the bed of the Todd River in the Northern Territory speaking to Indigenous locals in April 1978. Credit: Age archive

By the early 1980s, a patchwork of laws and practices governed land rights across the continent. Labor took a commitment to uniform land-­rights legislation to the 1983 election, promising to use Commonwealth powers to override unco-operative states.

The draft proposed minimum uniform land rights across the states and territories, including protection of sacred sites, a veto over mining, and royalties. A fear campaign began, led by AMIC and the Western Australian Chamber of Mines, with media releases, opinion pieces and press, radio and TV advertising, including full-­page advertisements in national newspapers.

The public campaign was designed to make ordinary Australians with no direct involvement in mining feel they had a stake in disputes happening far from where they lived. The centrepiece was the argument that Aborigines should not have special rights. AMIC distributed speakers’ notes with arguments such as: “Land rights should be equal rights, not greater rights”; “Australia is one country and there should be one set of laws for everyone”; “No country can be divided against itself and survive.”

It claimed that the proposed legislation had the power to lock-up a quarter of Australia’s surface, bring mining exploration to a halt and damage the nation’s prosperity. In Western Australia, a TV ad showed a black hand reaching across the state to build a wall: the message was that land rights would lock-up vast areas of territory.

The appeal to equality rejected arguments that Aboriginal people’s distinctive relationship to the land, and their distinctive suffering as a colonised people, entitled them to special rights or treatment. It was a powerful appeal and support for land rights started to fall, among both the public and elected politicians.

The WA premier, Brian Burke, told Hawke that the commitment to uniform land rights could cost Labor up to eight seats in his state at the 1984 federal election. Hawke dropped the veto over mining exploration, and by 1986 the government had effectively abandoned the promise of uniform legislation, leaving the states to do as they wished.

Demonstrators in Sydney march on John Howard's office in December 1997. Credit: Paul Jones

Then came the High Court’s 1992 Mabo judgment, when the miners needed to defend themselves all over again. Land rights were legislated rights, created by the state and federal parliaments, and they did not challenge European Australia’s foundational assumption that when Captain Cook claimed Australia for the Crown there were no pre-­existing property rights, that it was terra nullius.

The High Court’s finding that in certain circumstances a form of native title might still exist unleashed an even nastier and more divisive campaign than the one waged against uniform land rights.

Hugh Morgan called on the Coalition to overrule the Mabo decision if they won government by passing legislation to extinguish native title. As this would open the government to unknown claims for compensation for the extinguished rights, conservatives also called for the 1975 Racial Discrimination Act to be overturned so that native title rights could be abolished without compensation. Victorian premier Jeff Kennett played on fears by falsely suggesting that even suburban backyards could be at risk.

John Howard speaks to the media after a special meeting with premiers in April 1997 called to discuss a response to the High Court's Wik decision. Credit: Mike Bowers

Paul Keating, who was now prime minister, saw the Mabo judgment as a historic judgment that laid the foundation for reconciliation. Others saw it very differently. State governments did not want to concede their rights over land titles; mining and pastoral interests were alarmed about the potential impact on their leases; and many, but not all, of the Coalition opposed Aborigines being treated any differently from other Australians.

After extensive consultations, including with Indigenous groups, the Native Title Act passed at the end of 1993. Native title holders could negotiate over development, but they did not hold any veto powers.

The Mabo judgment was clear that freehold title extinguished native title, but it said nothing about leases. At the end of 1996 another High Court judgment in a case bought by the Wik people of Aurukun found that leases did not necessarily extinguish native title.

In response the new prime minister, John Howard, held up to a television camera a map of Australia showing just how much of the continent might be subject to claims. The National Party’s leader, Tim Fischer, toured the bush calling for “bucket-­loads of extinguishment”, as if native title was a fire threat.

Howard rejected extinguishment because of the unknown compensation it would trigger, but the 10-­point plan he developed severely curtailed the rights of native title holders and did not include the right to negotiate with mining companies on pastoral leases.

The campaigns against uniform land rights and then native title built an alliance between the National Party and Australia’s miners. Miners could spruik their contribution to Australia’s national prosperity, but they were hard-­pressed to give this a human face. The National Party could provide any number: weathered old farmers talking about their pioneering forebears and their deep love of the land; or young couples living in the outback and raising their kids far from city amenities.

These tough men and women wearing Akubras and standing in outback landscapes were invaluable to the miners’ campaign to associate the fight against native title with a shared national heritage, to make it seem relevant to the vast maj­ority of Australians, who would never be affected by a native title claim.

The campaign was also invaluable to the National Party. Beginning life in 1920 as the Australian Country Party to represent farmers and rural communities, its base was shrinking. When Fraser defeated Whitlam at the end of 1975, the National Country Party won 11.04 per cent of the national first preference vote and 22 seats. In 1996, when Howard defeated Keating, it was 8.2 per cent and 18 seats.

The problems facing the National Party were not just a shrinking base but uncertainty about what it stood for. Its Coalition partner was enthusiastically embracing free-­market policies, which threatened the many subsidised services country people enjoyed. Yet it could not openly break

with the Liberals and risk its cabinet positions. Fighting against Aboriginal land rights gave it new relevance, and the miners paid for advertisements which reminded the public that the Australians at the heart of the country were the men and women on the land.

After John Howard won the 1996 federal election, policies seen to favour Indigenous Australians were an immediate target, frequently justified with one-­line arguments about equality straight from AMIC’s 1980s speakers’ notes against land rights. The miners were defending their economic interests but in doing this they had weakened public sympathy for Aboriginal people and popularised arguments against their distinctive rights. Here was the resource curse in action. Pauline Hanson rode into parliament on such arguments, and they are trotted out regularly by conservatives.

The big miners did subsequently work hard to repair their credentials with Indigenous Australians, developing strategies to boost employment, offering scholarships and cadetships, employing archaeologists and anthropologists to advise on cultural heritage. BHP, Rio Tinto, Glencore and Fortescue all proclaim a commitment to engaging with Indigenous people and outline various targeted programs on their websites. They could be generous once they had won.

The mining industry’s campaign against land rights and native title gave it the capacity to mount public relations and advertising campaigns and the confidence that it could win; and it created a network of influential right-­wing warriors primed to defend Australia’s existing distribution of power and resources. When climate change began seriously to threaten fossil-­fuel miners at the end of last century, they knew what to do.

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Study: Climate Change Crisis Requires Less Growth-Oriented Global Economy

UPIBrooks Hays

The pursuit of affluence is a major impediment to curbing global warming and repairing Earth's damaged ecosystems, researchers argue in a new paper. Photo by nikolabelopitov/Pixabay

Economies and consumers can't aspire to both affluence and sustainability, researchers warn in a new paper, published Friday in the journal Nature Communications.

Hundreds of studies have highlighted the challenges facing the planet's climate, biodiversity and food systems -- global warming, pollution, habitat loss -- but few have focused on the relationship between Earth's climate and ecological crises and the planet's growth-oriented economies and the pursuit of affluence.

Many economists, business leaders, policy makers and even a few climate scientists have suggested technological advances will see planet Earth and its economies through the climate crisis -- continuing economic growth but with a smaller carbon footprint.

Sustainable lifestyles are situated between an upper limit of permissible use “Environmental ceiling” and a lower limit of necessary use of environmental resources “Social foundation”.

But a new paper by an international team of scientists argues such predictions ignore the realities of economic and environmental history.

The authors claim the pursuit of affluence is a major impediment to curbing global warming and repairing Earth's damaged ecosystems.

"Our paper has shown that it's actually dangerous and leads to planetary-scale destruction," Julia Steinberger, a professor of ecological economics at the University of Leeds in Britain, said in a news release. "To protect ourselves from the worsening climate crisis, we must reduce inequality and challenge the notion that riches, and those who possess them, are inherently good."

For the study, researchers looked at the drivers of consumption across the world's largest economies, as well as the role of technology in the pursuit of sustainability.

"In our scientists' warning, we identify the underlying forces of overconsumption and spell out the measures that are needed to tackle the overwhelming 'power' of consumption and the economic growth paradigm -- that's the gap we fill," said lead study author Tommy Wiedmann, professor of environmental engineering at the University of New South Wales in Australia.

Analysis of economic and energy-use trends over the last four decades showed that wealth growth has continuously outpaced efficiency gains.

"Technology can help us to consume more efficiently -- to save energy and resources -- but these technological improvements cannot keep pace with our ever-increasing levels of consumption," Wiedmann said.

Shown is how the global material footprint (MF, equal to global raw material extraction) and global CO2 emissions from fossil-fuel combustion and industrial processes (CO2 FFI) changed compared with global GDP (constant 2010 USD). Indexed to 1 in 1990. Data sources: https://www.resourcepanel.org/global-material-flows-database, http://www.globalcarbonatlas.org and https://data.worldbank.org.





The new research also highlighted what many critiques of climate change mitigation plans have pointed out -- that the world's wealthiest citizens shoulder most of the blame for the planet's environmental problems.

The wealthiest citizens have the largest carbon footprint and apply the greatest negative pressure to natural resources, researchers said.

"Consumption of affluent households worldwide is by far the strongest determinant - and the strongest accelerator -- of increased global environmental and social impacts," said study co-author Lorenz Keysser, researcher at ETH Zurich in Switzerland.

But authors of the new study suggest it is not just individual attitudes about affluence that must change. They also note that all of the world's largest economies are designed to prioritize growth, which they call problematic.

"The structural imperative for growth in competitive market economies leads to decision makers being locked into bolstering economic growth, and inhibiting necessary societal changes," Wiedmann said. "So, we have to get away from our obsession with economic growth -- we really need to start managing our economies in a way that protects our climate and natural resources, even if this means less, no or even negative growth."

To address the problem of overconsumption by the planet's wealthiest citizens, researchers suggest a range of taxes could be used to alter spending behaviors and shift investment patterns.

Some scientists estimate that the world's economies will actually need to shrink in order to stave off ecological disaster.

"'Degrowth' proponents go a step further and suggest a more radical social change that leads away from capitalism to other forms of economic and social governance," Wiedmann said.

"Policies may include, for example, eco-taxes, green investments, wealth redistribution through taxation and a maximum income, a guaranteed basic income and reduced working hours," Wiedmann said.

While there is disagreement on what must be done, authors of the new paper claim there is no doubt that current economic trends are unsustainable.

"The strongest pillar of the necessary transformation is to avoid or to reduce consumption until the remaining consumption level falls within planetary boundaries, while fulfilling human needs," researchers wrote in the new paper.

"Avoiding consumption means not consuming certain goods and services, from living space (overly large homes, secondary residences of the wealthy) to oversized vehicles, environmentally damaging and wasteful food, leisure patterns and work patterns involving driving and flying."

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(AU) We've Been Talking Climate Change Action For 30 Years. Will Covid-19 Finally Jolt Us Into Gear?

ABC NewsMichael Slezak

For 30 years we've completely failed to lower global emissions — we don't have the luxury of failing for the next 30. (ABC News: Jesse Thompson)

Author
Michael Slezak is the ABC's national science, technology and environment reporter.
 The day after I turned eight, MC Hammer released the hit single, U Can't Touch This.

While 1990 was arguably the peak of MC Hammer's career, it was also arguably the year international action on climate change began.

The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) handed down its first assessment report, which said scientists were "certain" greenhouse gases emitted by humans would warm the world.

Thirty years later, MC Hammer might feel like ancient history, but he puts into perspective how long we've been talking about climate action.

Earlier this year, I realised something shocking: If 1990 was the year we started acting on climate change, we are now halfway along our timeline for transitioning the world to a zero-carbon economy.

In the latest IPCC report, it is estimated that we need to reach net-zero emissions by 2050 to have a reasonable chance of keeping global warming at 1.5 degrees Celsius. That is as far in the future as 1990 is in the past.

In other words, we've spent as long dithering on climate as we have time to completely eliminate our contribution to climate-warming pollution: 30 years.

So with three decades gone, and 30 years to go, what have we achieved so far?

We've gone backwards

On the one hand, we have now mostly developed the technology required to achieve the transition. We've also put international frameworks in place that could guide it.

But where it matters — stopping the burning of fossil fuels, for instance — we've done nothing.

Actually, we've arguably done worse than nothing. We've emitted more carbon dioxide into the atmosphere by burning fossil fuels since that 1990 report and hit single than we have during the rest of human history before 1990.

At this crucial point, the world has been shaken by the COVID-19 pandemic, and its economic fallout. But the inevitable response to that economic crisis is an opportunity, too.

Australia has recently experienced unprecedented bushfires, with the world now seeing what about one degree of warming can mean. (Australian Story: Ben Cheshire)

This week the International Energy Agency (IEA) and the International Monetary Fund made this point in no uncertain terms.

It projected a massive drop in energy-related emissions from the COVID-19 fallout. It also said decisions made in the coming months will determine whether economic stimulus will see emissions rebound, or make 2019 the peak in global emissions.

"Governments have a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to reboot their economies and bring a wave of new employment opportunities while accelerating the shift to a more resilient and cleaner energy future," said Dr Fatih Birol, the IEA's executive director.

What did we know back then?

In that first IPCC report in 1990, it was estimated that if the burning of fossil fuels continued to accelerate steadily, the world would warm by about one degree by 2025.

They were right, except emissions increased faster than modelled and the world had warmed by one degree about a decade earlier.

That report, with its clear summary for policymakers, can be seen as the start of a sequence of events that led to all our international climate change agreements.

The year 1990 — or perhaps 1992, when the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change was adopted — is the year after which there was no excuse for world leaders not understanding the significance of climate change.

Coral bleaching at Magnetic Island, North Queensland, in March 2020. (Supplied: Victor Huertas)

All those international agreements allow nations to determine their own level of action. That means agreements only achieve things if countries decide to take strong action.

Australia is among a handful of influential countries that have been widely criticised for failing to do that.

The years 2050 and 1990 are now equally far from today, but the world's response to climate change must be radically different in those two periods if we want to keep warming at 1.5 degrees — which is what most countries pledged to try to do as part of the Paris Agreement.

If we continue along our current path, the scientists who issued warnings — the IPCC — are clear about what will happen: By 2050, the world will be pushing two degrees of warming.

What does that mean on the ground?

Well, the world is now seeing what about one degree of warming means. Australia has recently experienced unprecedented bushfires and lost half the coral on the Great Barrier Reef.

Heat records are being broken at unprecedented rates, and cold records are vanishing into the past.

The transition to a zero-carbon world will bring both pain and opportunity.

Jobs will be lost in some industries, but transitioning those jobs to new industries must be a priority. And side-effects of stopping climate change can be cleaner air, more reliable electricity grids and safer work.

According to a coalition of organisations including the Business Council of Australia, the Australian Industry group and now the International Energy Agency, a recovery from the COVID-19 economic crisis can be achieved while bringing down emissions.

Building a safe world, they say, will not come at the expense of jobs and economic growth, but will instead build jobs and growth.

We have the technology and framework to change, and a business community largely prepared to do the work. But for 30 years we've completely failed to lower global emissions.

We don't have the luxury of failing for the next 30.

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