So, I finally got a reply to my previous letters to the Prime Minister (you can read them here and here). At least, I got a letter from the Prime Minister which was apparently prompted by my letters. It's essentially a piece of spin, assuring me what a great job the government is doing on climate change. If only that were true!
Of course I didn't have high expectations and I have decided to discipline myself to be persistent in this correspondence, so unlike the PM's staff, who ignored everything I said and just spun their own lines, I decided to reply point by point. Here it is for your enjoyment!
The Australian Government has a suite of practical policies in place to meet our emissions reduction targets while maintaining a strong and prosperous economy.
Of course I didn't have high expectations and I have decided to discipline myself to be persistent in this correspondence, so unlike the PM's staff, who ignored everything I said and just spun their own lines, I decided to reply point by point. Here it is for your enjoyment!
Dear Prime Minister
Thank you for your letter of 13 November in response to my letters to
you on climate change.
It is heartening to me that you have not followed the lead of some
of your colleagues and tried to cast shade on the science of climate change –
it’s a relief not to have that discussion.
It’s possible I would have been more reassured by your letter if
it was not for the fact that it arrived during a week in which Brisbane was
shrouded in smoke from the bushfires in southern Queensland and northern
NSW. I have never experienced this in my
50 years of living in Brisbane. This spring
it has happened twice. If there was ever
a time to re-evaluate our approach to climate change, this is it.
This also makes it somewhat disturbing that your letter does not
make any mention of adaptation. These
fires are a clear indication that the climate has already changed and it will
not go back to how it used to be – in fact, whatever happens we will experience
some level of further change. We are now
in the business of damage limitation not prevention. The clock is ticking.
With this in mind, I thought it would be a good exercise to
comment in detail on the contents of your letter. I am well aware that this letter is not a
specific reply to mine, but is a carefully crafted message which you will have
sent to many others like me. You may be
interested in how it comes across. Your
words are in italics, my comments in plain type.
Australia is taking climate action as part
of a coordinated global effort. We are
committed to the Paris Agreement and have a proud history of meeting and
beating our international climate change commitments – we are on track to beat
our 2020 target by 367 million tonnes.
Our Paris Target, reducing emissions by 26
to 28 percent on 2005 levels by 2030, is a responsible one that makes a
significant contribution to global climate action. It represents a halving of emissions per
person in Australia, or a two thirds reduction in emissions per unit of GDP. This is no mean feat, given Australia is in
its 29th year of uninterrupted economic growth, while emissions per
person are at their lowest levels in 29 years.
As is well known, the Paris Agreement consists of an overall
agreement to limit global warming to between 1.5 and 2 degrees Celsius, along
with a mechanism by which each nation nominates its own emissions reduction
targets to contribute to this. As was
highlighted in this year’s New York summit, the total global commitments are
far from being sufficient to achieve the overall goal. Australia’s 26-28% commitment is relatively
modest compared to other developed nations.
For instance the US, prior to its change of policy under President
Trump, pledged to reach the same target five years earlier, while the EU
committed to a 40% reduction on 1990 levels.
Even these commitments are not proportionate to the goal. It is clear that all nations, including us,
need to do more.
It is also hard to accept your assurances about meeting these
rather modest targets when official government data shows that our emissions
reductions have been stalled since 2013 and emissions have risen slightly over
this period. It is clear – and
implicitly confirmed in your letter – that part of the government’s claim to
reach the target rests on claiming carryover credits from meeting our Kyoto
commitments. This ironic considering our
commitment under the Kyoto Protocol was to increase our emissions by 8%, so we
are claiming to have met our emissions reduction targets by achieving a target
that involved increasing them. This may be
a neat accounting trick but it would be infinitely preferable for us to
actually reduce our emissions.
Although Australia is a comparatively small nation and hence has
only a small impact on the overall problem, it is important as an advanced
nation, a high per capita emitter and a major exporter of fossil fuels that we
are seen to lead the way. The Paris
Agreement requires momentum and every country that commits to deep emissions
cuts is more encouragement for others to follow suit. This is why our resistance at the Pacific
Forum, our half-hearted attitude to the recent New York summit and our failure
to contribute to the Green Climate Fund are so concerning.
The Australian Government has a suite of practical policies in place to meet our emissions reduction targets while maintaining a strong and prosperous economy.
We have heard much in the past decade about climate action and
emissions reduction as drags on the economy – economy and environment as
competing objectives. Now of all times
we should be aware how much this is a false dichotomy and all our leaders need
to stop talking this way. The more
frequent droughts that result from climate change, as we can see right now,
reduce our agricultural productivity, while the bushfires stemming from them
destroy life and property and cost in both lost productivity and increased
resources for emergency responses.
Increased damage from extreme weather events is pushing up everyone’s
insurance premiums. And this is before
we get to the adjustments that will be required as sea levels rise, and the
economic loss caused by damage to our coral reefs.
On the other hand, as you note later in your letter there are huge
economic opportunities in decarbonising our economy, through the development of
renewable energy, the development of the electric car market and the
development of new exports. We should be
going all out to get the most out of these opportunities.
At the centre of our policies is the $3.5b
Climate Solutions Package, including a new $2b Climate Solutions Fund. This builds on our previous $2.55b Emissions
Reductions Fund and will help businesses, communities and landholders to reduce
emissions. So far we have secured more
than $190 million tonnes of emissions reductions, or which over 80 per cent will
be delivered by the agricultural and land sectors. The Fund supports a range of practical
projects, including capturing methane from landfill and storing carbon in
forests and soils.
This fund certainly has some possibilities and it is good to hear
that there are some successes here.
However, this strategy is limited.
What happens when the funds are all spent? Do we plan to keep spending these amounts
continually? It seems to me that we need
a mechanism to incentivise business to keep improving its performance without
any limits. I know a carbon price is
toxic in your party but economists have consistently told us that it is the
most effective way to incentivise ongoing emission reductions as businesses
receive an ongoing payoff for their emissions reductions.
Australia is also on track for around one
third of our electricity needs to be met by renewables in the early 2020s. Right now, an unprecedented wave of clean
energy investment is underway in Australia and new records are being set. We have the world’s highest uptake of rooftop
solar – one in five homes have solar on their roofs.
To support the transition to renewable
energy, the Government is investing in the storage and infrastructure of the
future. This includes a $1.38 billion
equity investment in the snowy 2.0 project, which will be the biggest battery
in the Southern Hemisphere, and the $50.4 million Regional and Remote
Communities Reliability Fund, which will investigate whether off-grid and
standalone power supply systems such as microgrids are a reliable, cost
effective alternative to diesel generated power in remote and regional
communities.
The growth of renewable energy in Australia is one of the hopeful
signs in our climate action. Thirty
percent should be, and can be, just the beginning. AEMO has already modelled a pathway through
which we can increase this to between 50 and 60% by 2030, and ultimately to
100% by 2050 or earlier. We need to
support them to get on with it. I note
that State governments and industry players have expressed ongoing frustration at
your government’s struggles to develop a national energy policy. It’s time to get over that hurdle and put a
mechanism in place which facilitates a rapid and orderly transition to
renewables.
I also note that not long ago the CEO of the Australian Renewable
Energy Agency talked about Australia’s capacity to produce 700% of our domestic
energy requirements from renewables.
This would guarantee cheap, reliable electricity at home and fuel
massive export possibilities in areas such as selling electricity to South-East
Asia, production of liquid hydrogen and powering metals production. We need to not be limited by small thinking
here. Australia urgently needs to move
past the promotion of coal and LNG as our biggest exports and develop
alternatives that are responsible and sustainable.
Australia is also making progress towards
increasing our overall energy efficiency by 40 percent by 2030. The Climate Solutions Package, announced in
February 2019, provides measures to improve energy efficiency, such as $18
million to improve energy efficiency in homes and buildings and lower energy
bills.
It’s great that we are focusing on energy efficiency which is an
important part of the puzzle.
I am proud to say that Australia has one
of the highest rates of per capita investment in renewable energy technologies
in the world. The Clean Energy Finance
Corporation, the world’s most successful green bank, has mobilised over $20
billion in new investments in our economy.
This is another great success story and a key driver of change. It’s heartening that your government
continues to support its work.
Our resources are supporting the
transition to lower emissions around the world.
We are among the world’s largest exporters of Liquified Natural Gas and
hold among the largest reserves of lithium and cobalt for batteries.
It is disingenuous to try to claim LNG exports as a contribution
to emissions reduction. LNG is a fossil
fuel, and emissions are created in its production, its transport and its
use. The fact that these are lower than
coal is cold comfort, particularly when your government also continues to
support the expansion of coal mining in this country. These two exports are Australia’s biggest
contribution to global emissions, dwarfing our domestic emissions by a long
way, and our best contribution to tackling climate change will be to rapidly
phase out these industries and replace them with sustainable, renewables-based
industries. It is not sufficient to our
current situation to move to an alternative that is a little less bad, when we
have the opportunity to do so much better.
Looking ahead, we are developing a
National Electric Vehicle Strategy to ensure a planned and managed transition
to new vehicle technology. We are
investigating cleaner fuels for the future and will deliver a National Hydrogen
Strategy by the end of the year.
I look forward to seeing these strategies in the coming year, and
trust they will be ambitious and promote rapid transition!
By 2020 we will also develop a long-term
strategy to reduce emissions, like other parties to the Paris Agreement.
It will hardly surprise you if I close this response by urging you
to go to the 2020 conference with a far more ambitious emissions reduction
target than the one we are currently working towards. We need a clear pathway to zero net emissions
by 2050 or sooner. This is very much
doable, it just takes courage and determination on our part to commit and act.
Caring for God’s creation is a sacred trust, given to our species
from the very beginning. We need to do
this both for the love of God who created it, and for our own sakes because we
are part of this creation and can’t divorce ourselves from it. The smoke drifting across our cities, the
mass fish kills, the progress of species extinction and so many other
occurrences are clear signs that we are currently falling short on this
task. This calls for repentance and a
change of course.
I will continue to pray for you as you plot your course through
this issue and the other difficult problems that you face every day as our
elected leader.
Yours sincerely
Jon
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