Labor Blog

    We have a head start on low-carbon revolution

    Greg Combet posted Wednesday, 14 December 2011

    As published in The Australian, Wednesday 14 December 2011

    The decision by the UN climate change conference in Durban to pursue a new global agreement for reducing greenhouse gas emissions has profound economic significance for Australia.

    For the first time, all of the world's major emitters -- including Australia's two biggest trading partners, the US and China -- have committed to take on legal obligations to reduce carbon pollution. This new agreement, which is to be negotiated by 2015 and come into effect from 2020, will create a new international legal architecture for tackling climate change.

    It will replace the Kyoto Protocol's increasingly unsustainable divide between developed and developing economies by bringing all emitters into the international emissions reduction framework.

    In contrast to the claims by Tony Abbott and Bob Brown that the outcome was insignificant, countries around the world -- developed and developing -- have welcomed the agreement as a major step forward. The Durban outcome leaves no doubt that all major emitters will be part of a new legal pact on climate change.

    Some people have claimed that the 2020 timeframe for a new international legal agreement is too far off and that this will be a "do nothing decade". This could not be further from the truth.

    All countries now have a clear signal that there will be a new legal framework to reduce global emissions. The fact that this framework will be backed by legal force cannot be underestimated. It means that all countries will be legally bound to implement measures to reduce carbon pollution.

    Those countries with strong domestic climate change policies already in place -- from Europe to China -- have a head start on the low-carbon revolution that will occur this decade and beyond.

    The Gillard government's carbon price ensures Australia is ready to meet our domestic and international commitments.

    Just imagine if we had waited until 2020 before taking action.

    Not only would we miss out on valuable opportunities this decade to build the jobs and industries of the future, we would face a significant economic shock when the new legal framework came into place and we had to achieve emissions cuts overnight. But this is exactly the approach that underpins the Coalition's climate change policies. Abbott thinks that by planting trees and offering taxpayer-funded subsidies to a few polluters, Australia will be well positioned to compete in the future low-carbon world. It is a recipe for economic decline.

    The Durban outcome builds on climate action already under way including the pledges of 90 countries to reduce emissions by 2020.

    This will create momentum for investments in clean energy and energy efficiency. In addition, the government is providing $1.5 billion to support innovation in Australian industry and manufacturing to seize the opportunities of a low-carbon world. Australia's transformation to a clean energy future is critical to our future competitiveness.

    Implementing our clean energy reforms will be essential in the years ahead and central to my new responsibilities as Minister for Industry and Innovation and my continuing role as Minister for Climate Change and Energy Efficiency.

    The outcome in Durban confirms that by moving ahead with these reforms we are moving in step with global action on climate change.

24 Comments

  • Douglas from Blaxland , NSW Sunday, 1 January 2012, 23:01

    Gwallan perhaps you are right. What is more certain, I think, is that in the immaturity and madness scale the libs well outdo labor. Will modern democracy be "fixed" by replacing the imperfect with the defective?

  • gwallan from Eaglehawk , Victoria Sunday, 1 January 2012, 09:01

    @Douglas...
    "That would be like being governed by some nightmarish and poorly supervised children of a creche or the inmates of a mental asylum."

    We already have that. Can it be fixed or is modern democracy ultimately doomed?

  • gwallan from Eaglehawk , Victoria Saturday, 31 December 2011, 09:31

    Twenty five years and counting...

    http://www.geni.org/

    Won't happen of course because our idiot politicians have sold the infrastructure to monied cretins.

    Hydraulic despotism is our future.

  • dmans5 from Maroubra , nsw Friday, 23 December 2011, 19:23

    I hope Tony Abbott doesnt help Labor with off shore processing. Labor got into bed with the Greens and they should stay in that bed till the sheets STINK. I dare Labor to get tough with the Greens ie grow some.

  • Douglas from Blaxland , NSW Friday, 23 December 2011, 09:23

    By "grown ups" you cannot seriously mean the ADHD likes of Barnaby Joyce or the retarded Tony Abbott can you? That would be like being governed by some nightmarish and poorly supervised children of a creche or the inmates of a mental asylum.

  • jellio111 from brisbane , queensland Thursday, 22 December 2011, 19:22

    by 2020, this climate change garbage will be put to bed and a faze that the tree huggers of the world fail to get implemented. bit like flair pants of the seventies.

  • no1LiberalSupporter from Melbourne , Victoria Thursday, 22 December 2011, 16:22

    LOL LOL LOL LOL. Not long till labour is in the political wilderness.LOL LOL LOL LOL. Then we can let the grown-ups govern the country!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

  • Douglas from Blaxland , NSW Thursday, 22 December 2011, 14:22

    ...and liberal party supporters are VERY average sorts of voters...

  • Douglas from Blaxland , NSW Thursday, 22 December 2011, 14:22

    Far more hypocritical for a LIBERAL party supporter to charge ANYONE of being immature or embarassing given that overactivity of the amygdala and an anatomically diminutive pre-frontal cortex is the defining characteristic of the average lib voter

  • no1LiberalSupporter from Melbourne , Victoria Thursday, 22 December 2011, 09:22

    And this is the same government that is selling the coal to China!LOL How hypocritical!LOL.Go home little girl(gillard) to mumy and daddy and let the grown-ups run the country!LOL.The majority of Australians think this government is an embarrasment!

  • zedlive from Tamworth , NSW Sunday, 18 December 2011, 19:18

    D, somewhere you characters lost your way on business skills. The context is broader than one countries situation. The context is global.

  • dmans5 from Maroubra , nsw Friday, 16 December 2011, 10:16

    You are right Z, Australian schools should teach more mathermatics and we could export mathermations to the world.They could start with the numbers RE Global warming because the scientists lack credability. Maths rules OK.

  • zedlive from Tamworth , NSW Friday, 16 December 2011, 08:16

    The point is D that which you describe is the expression of the mathematical shortage globally. How we set up structurally the context for it's resolution now will determine what we face over coming decades.

  • dmans5 from Maroubra , nsw Thursday, 15 December 2011, 20:15

    Australia is about a small population rich in resources having to pay more for its power than countries with much less , China with CO2 annual increase greater than the whole of our CO2 plant food annual release..................... Someones simple.

  • zedlive from Tamworth , NSW Thursday, 15 December 2011, 07:15

    Europe is about people in high population to resource countries exposing their willingness to contribute larger numbers of hours of their life to procuring resources than what the Europeans have been doing.

    It's that simple.

  • zedlive from Tamworth , NSW Thursday, 15 December 2011, 07:15

    Europe is about people in high population to resource countries exposing their willingness to contribute larger numbers of hours of their life to procuring resources than what the Europeans have been doing.

    It's that simple.

  • dmans5 from Maroubra , nsw Wednesday, 14 December 2011, 22:14

    Australia with a head start? Reminds me of the captain asking for a volenteer to step forward and everyone steps back and Australia stupidly steps forward. Labor can wreck our economy with or without a carbon tax , just quicker.

  • chris1948 from Melbourne , VIC Wednesday, 14 December 2011, 20:14

    Must be a pretty crummy 4WD if it gets stuck.
    Maybe its a Toorak tractor.

  • chris1948 from Melbourne , VIC Wednesday, 14 December 2011, 20:14

    Shrinking subsidies for wind and other renewables Europe-wide rendering snouts in the trough non profit making. The Governments don't have the money.
    Australia warmists with tunnel vision pursuing the same course.
    Help us all!

  • zedlive from Tamworth , NSW Wednesday, 14 December 2011, 20:14

    Or like that winter Olympics sport where the pucks path can only have little scrapes hear and there in it's path.

  • zedlive from Tamworth , NSW Wednesday, 14 December 2011, 20:14

    It's a ball always rolling revealing what it has collected and what is has discarded at it's edges as it revolves on.

  • chris1948 from Melbourne , VIC Wednesday, 14 December 2011, 20:14

    Kyoto, Canada?
    The report by economic experts in the EU; consumers have coughed up $287 billion for 'no impact'?
    The forecast collapse of the carbon trading system there by next year by the same people due to the economic clime?
    All good is it?

  • zedlive from Tamworth , NSW Wednesday, 14 December 2011, 19:14

    Without technological breakthrough or barrier to it's expression through the world economy its consequences must be observable in economies.

  • zedlive from Tamworth , NSW Wednesday, 14 December 2011, 19:14

    Like a 4WD on a mud flat at low tide there is nothing surer than the tide of resource consumption flowing back over the top of the world in the coming decades.