Photographer: Carla Gottgens/Bloomberg |
The nation will still be emitting 215 million tons of emissions by 2050 under its new plan, compared with 316 million tons without it, a table in the document released Friday shows.
Still, the modeling shows offsets will only be responsible for reducing net-zero emissions by 94 million tons by 2050. The government expects to close the gap to net-zero with technological advancements emerging over the next three decades, though the report noted that the analysis isn’t a precise prediction of economic or technology trends.
About 70% of the planned emission reductions under the plan, announced by Prime Minister Scott Morrison’s conservative government last month, is expected to come from the “technology investment roadmap,” “global technology trends” or “further technology breakthroughs.”
Emissions Target Australia's plan to zero out greenhouse gas emissions by 2050 relies heavily on technology |
Source: Australian government |
The release is unlikely to ease criticism of Morrison’s policies, with Australia under pressure during the COP26 summit to enact stronger short-term action to combat climate change. The country, one of the world’s top suppliers of fossil fuels, will also continue to rely heavily on projects designed to offset planet-warming pollution.
Morrison, whose government relies on support from voters in communities with strong resources industries including coal-mining, is refusing to impose taxes on polluters, saying strict government intervention on climate change would add pressure on living costs and threaten businesses.
“Climate change will ultimately be solved by ‘can do’ capitalism, not ‘don’t do’ governments seeking to control people’s lives and tell them what to do, with interventionist regulation and taxes that just force up your cost of living and force businesses to close,” Morrison said Wednesday in Melbourne.
Links
- Australia’s Long-Term Emissions Reduction Plan: Modelling And Analysis (pdf)
- ‘Pure spin’Experts pan Coalition net-zero modelling that allows gas sector to grow
- Net zero 2050 modelling released by Morrison government online after weeks of waiting
- Eight years, 20 policies: how Australia’s leaders have fumbled and dithered on climate
- Coalition granted $21m to Liberal party donor to frack Beetaloo Basin
- Scott Morrison says gas will ‘always’ be a major contributor to Australia’s prosperity
- Anthony Albanese sends mixed signals on fossil fuels as Labor wrestles over climate policy
- Australia's proposed gas pipelines would generate emissions equivalent to 33 coal-fired power plants
- Scott Morrison refuses to commit to net zero emissions target by 2050
- Major energy companies call on Coalition to set target of net zero emissions by 2050
- Australia commits to 2050 net zero emissions plan but with no detail and no modelling
- Coal Mines Seen Belching Worst Australia Methane Cloud This Yea
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